unwinder
English
Etymology
unwind + -er
Noun
unwinder (plural unwinders)
- A device that unwinds.
- (colloquial) An alcoholic drink taken as a relaxant.
- 1982, Lawrence Durrell, Constance, New York: Viking, Chapter Five, p. 114,
- It seemed to them the ideal place for those confidential mid-morning potations and games of pool for which the Foreign Office had invented the phrase “elevenses”, after the hour of the morning when one feels one most needs a short swift drink, or a long “unwinder”, to use slang.
- 2010, William Campbell, Apotheosis, Glyd-Evans Press, p. 137,
- In contrast to the overwhelming sweetness, the cool drink is bitter like coffee, but with a strong bite of alcohol. One sip and I hand it back. Not the time for that sort of unwinder.
- 1982, Lawrence Durrell, Constance, New York: Viking, Chapter Five, p. 114,