malvoisie
English
Etymology
From Middle English malvesye, malvesyn, from Anglo-Norman malvesey, malvoisin and Middle French malvoisie (which the modern form is influenced by), from Italian malvasia, from Ancient Greek Μονεμβασία (Monembasía, “Monemvasia”, a city on the Peloponnese), from μόνος (mónos, “only one”) + ἔμβασις (émbasis, “entering into”, ἐν + βάσις). Doublet of Monemvasia. Compare malmsey.
Noun
malvoisie (countable and uncountable, plural malvoisies)
- Synonym of malmsey (“wine”)
- 1852, The Royalist and the Republican, volume 1, page 108:
- Now this Malvoisie has a body, and slips down the red lane with an unctuous savour; […]
- 1991, Stephen Fry, chapter XIV, in Liar:
- Adrian stood and refilled Shelagh's glass. ‘A little more malvoisie for you?’
- 2011, Thomas Penn, Winter King, Penguin, published 2012, page 217:
- There, gifts were exchanged […] and Philip's mistrels performed in front of the king's mother who sat, appreciative, her customary glass of malvesey to hand.
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