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单词 sweet
释义

sweetn.

Brit. /swiːt/, U.S. /swit/
Forms: see next.
Etymology: sweet adj. used substantively.
1.
a. That which is sweet to the taste; something having a sweet taste. Chiefly poetic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [noun] > sweet thing
sweetnessc725
sweeta1300
nectary1598
ambrosia1605
a1300 Cursor Mundi 23979 He dranc þe sure and i þe suete.
1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis I. 82 Fulofte and thus the swete soureth, Whan it is knowe to the tast.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 7126 Of þe etand þe mete vt sprang, And þe suete vte o þe strang.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. iii. sig. C5v A dram of sweete is worth a pound of sowre.
1611 Bible (King James) 1 Esdras ix. 51 Goe then and eate the fat, and drinke the sweet . View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) iii. i. 160 Let them not licke The sweet which is their poyson. View more context for this quotation
1782 W. Cowper Conversation in Poems 234 The mind..Visiting ev'ry flow'r with labour meet, And gathering all her treasures sweet by sweet.
b. A sweet food or drink.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > types or qualities of beverage > [noun] > sweet drink
sweetc1540
propomate1657
mead1667
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > [noun]
confection1393
sweetmeat?a1500
junkery1509
conceit1525
banqueta1533
junketry1599
sweet1660
spice1674
knick-knack1682
confectionery1769
confiture1802
candy?1809
knick-knackery1813
mithai1824
dulce1834
sweet-stuff1835
bouchées1846
ket1979
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 13683 Fortune..Lurkis in lightly with lustis in hert, Gers hym swolow a swete, þat swellis hym after.
1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 22 The Nobility of the Country affect much to eat Ambar, Musk, and other sweets.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iv, in tr. Virgil Wks. 131 Such Rage of Honey in their Bosom beats: And such a Zeal they have for flow'ry Sweets . View more context for this quotation
1743 P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Odes II. iv. xii. 22 Bring the glad merchandise, with sweets replete.
1802 Eng. Encycl. V. 610/2 The purer sweets, as sugar... The unctuous and mucilaginous sweets, as the impure sugars, liquorice, &c.
1859 F. Nightingale Notes on Nursing vii. 41 I have never known a person take to sweets when he was ill who disliked them when he was well.
1887 R. Jefferies Amaryllis at Fair iii If there were two courses, then bread between to prepare the palate, and to prevent the sweets from quarrelling with the acids.
c. plural. Syrup added to wine or other liquor to sweeten and improve its flavour; hence, wine or other liquor thus sweetened; applied spec. to British wines and cordials.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > other alcoholic drinks > [noun] > others
stitch-broth1635
Cherellya1640
rug1653
steel-nose1654
pope's-milka1661
Northdown1670
purl royal1675
sweetsa1679
forty-ninea1713
huggle-my-buff1756
slug1756
gunpowder1765
guarapo1772
peachy1781
all nations1785
anti-fogmatic1789
soma1827
ava1831
native1832
tap1832
stone fence1844
slap-bang1845
Angostura1856
jake1910
tepache1926
pruno1936
muratina1968
makkoli1970
alcopop1996
the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > wine-making > [noun] > treatment or adulteration > substances
parel1594
yeso1619
sweetsa1679
Harry1699
forcing?1734
geropiga1852
liqueur1872
gum1888
a1679 J. Moore Englands Interest (1703) 33 The best way to Order your Sugar before you put it into your Cyder, is to make it into a kind of Syrup or Sweets.
1696 Act 7 & 8 Will. III c. 30 §6 Mixed Liquors commonly called and known by the Name of Sweets, made from foreign or English Materials.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Sweets, the Dreggs of Sugar used by Vintners, to allay the undue fermenting or fretting of their Wine.
1765 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. I. i. viii. 320 All artificial wines, commonly called sweets.
1842 Penny Mag. 29 Oct. 431/1 Mark Beaufoy..entered his name at the Excise as a ‘maker of sweets’ about a century ago.
1845 G. Dodd Brit. Manuf. 5th Ser. 98 At first the name of ‘sweets’ was confined principally to the varieties of raisin-wine.
1889 Act 52 & 53 Vict. c. 42 §28 The expression ‘sweets or made wines’ shall mean any liquor which is made from fruit and sugar..and which has undergone a process of fermentation.
d. spec. A sweet dish (a pudding, tart, cooked fruit, etc.), or one of several such, forming a separate course at a meal. Usually plural in early use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > [noun] > dish > sweet dish
dessert1789
entremet1824
sweet1832
pudding1934
the world > food and drink > food > meal > course > [noun] > course after main
after-mess1489
banquet1523
after-course1580
fruit1587
dessert1600
sweet1832
confectionery1847
afters1909
pudding1934
follows1946
1832 F. Trollope Domest. Manners Amer. (ed. 2) II. xxviii. 99 They are ‘extravagantly fond’,..of puddings, pies, and all kinds of ‘sweets’.
1836 C. Dickens Sketches by Boz 1st Ser. II. 312 The sweets [on the table] shook and trembled till it was quite impossible to help them.
1852 W. M. Thackeray Henry Esmond II. xv. 312 By the time the soup came he fancied they must have been hours at table: and as for the sweets and jellies he thought they never would be done.
a1864 N. Hawthorne Dr. Grimshawe (1891) xix. 246 And entremets, and ‘sweets’, as the English call them.
1890 R. C. Lehmann Harry Fludyer 41 There was a delicious sweet for luncheon... It was like a sort of bird's-nest in spun barley-sugar with whipped cream eggs inside.
1954 J. Betjeman Few Late Chrysanthemums 95 I know what I wanted to ask you—Is trifle sufficient for sweet?
1968 New Society 22 Aug. 266/2 Another course of a meal is called ‘sweet’ by the non-U... The U word for the course is pudding.
1979 J. Cooper Class xii. 202 Everything from lemon water ice to jam roly-poly pudding, Caroline would call ‘pudding’. She would never say ‘sweet’ or ‘dessert’.
e. A sweetmeat, esp. in lozenge or ‘drop’ form.sweetie n. is earlier in this sense.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > sweets > [noun] > a sweet
dredgec1350
confection1393
sugar-meat1586
trinket1587
confectionary1599
soot-meat1614
dulcid1694
sweetie1721
goody-goody1745
bon-bon1796
confiture1802
candy?1809
sweetmeat1812
sucker1823
dulce1834
lokum1845
goody1847
sweet1851
dragée1853
lolly1854
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 203/2 Rose acid, which is a ‘transparent’ sweet.
1864 C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend (1865) I. i. v. 33 The basket supplied the few small lots of fruit and sweets that he offered for sale.
1877 R. J. More Under Balkans xv. 216 Sweets, jelly, and water were then handed round by the bridesmaids to the assembled guests.
f. plural. Drugs, esp. amphetamines. U.S. slang.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > stimulant drug(s)
sweets1961
high1962
uppie1966
upper1968
1961 R. Russell Sound (1962) ii. ix. 158 He was holding, just as Red had said. Santa had the sweets.
1979 S. Smith Survivor xxi. 221 A whole load of minor drugs, mostly amphetamines—known as ‘sweets’, ‘blues’ and ‘black bombers’.
2. Sweetness of taste; sweet taste. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [noun]
sweetnessc897
honey1340
sweetc1381
suavityc1450
dulcetness1528
dulcitude1605
honeyedness1611
sweetinga1626
nectareousness1847
saccharinity1868
c1381 G. Chaucer Parl. Foules 161 For thu of loue hast lost thi tast, y gesse As seek man hath of swete & bitternesse.
1705 R. Beverley Hist. Virginia ii. iv. 15 Their [sc. mulberries'] Taste..being of a faintish Sweet, without any Tartness.
1887 G. T. Ladd Physiol. Psychol. ii. iii. §13. 313 It seems tolerably well established that sweet and sour are tasted chiefly with the tip of the tongue.
3.
a. That which is pleasant to the mind or feelings; something that affords enjoyment or gratifies desire; (a) pleasure, (a) delight; the pleasant part of something. In later use chiefly in plural, the pleasures or delights of something.Often opposed to bitter, sour, and in expressions retaining literal phraseology, e.g. to taste or suck the sweet(s) of.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > [noun]
lustc888
lustfulnessa900
queemnesseOE
mirtheOE
estec1000
winOE
queemc1175
sweetness?c1225
solace1297
dutea1300
lustinga1300
joyingc1300
jollityc1330
lustiheadc1369
lustinessc1374
sweet1377
voluptyc1380
well-pleasinga1382
pleasancec1385
pleasurea1393
volupta1398
easementc1400
pleasingc1400
complacencec1436
pleasec1475
satisfaction1477
likancea1500
oblectation1508
beauty1523
aggradation1533
pleasurancec1540
joc1560
likement1577
contentment1587
beloving1589
gratification1598
savouriness1599
entertain1601
pleasedness1626
well-apaidness1633
well-pleasedness1633
pleasingness1649
complacency1652
adlubescence1656
enjoyment1665
volupe1669
musica1674
pleasantry1740
barrel of fun (laughs, etc.)1915
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > [noun] > source of pleasure
honeycombOE
sweetness?c1225
dainty1340
sweet1377
delicec1390
lust1390
pleasancec1390
pleasingc1390
well-queema1400
well-queemnessa1400
douceurc1400
delectation?a1425
pleasure1443
pleaserc1447
delectabilitiesa1500
deliciositiesa1500
honeydew1559
delicacy1586
fancy1590
sugar candy1591
regalo1622
happiness1637
deliciousness1651
complacence1667
regalea1677
sweetener1741
bon-bon1856
Bones1869
jam1871
true love1893
nuts1910
barrel of fun (laughs, etc.)1915
G-spot1983
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > [noun] > pleasures
lustsc1000
sweet1377
voluptyc1380
delicies1534
singular.
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xi. 250 Al though it be soure to suffre þere cometh swete [C. xiii. 143 a swete] after.
1423 Kingis Quair clxxxii Euery wicht his awin suete or sore Has maist In mynde.
c1450 Jacob's Well (1900) 106 He had leuere lesyn thre massys þan to forgo oo slepe or o sweet in þe morwenyng.
1553 T. Wilson Arte Rhetorique (1580) 31 Where the sweete hath his sower ioyned with hym.
1578 J. Rolland Seuin Seages 70 He..had slokinnit of bedsolace the sweit.
1589 T. Cooper Admon. People of Eng. 178 Princes..which suck the sweete from the people of God.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) iv. iii. 3 When Daffadils begin to peere,..Why then comes in the sweet o'the yeere. View more context for this quotation
1637 T. Heywood Pleasant Dial. in Wks. (1874) VI. 302 Who can know the sweet of ease, That never was in paine?
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World iii. 64 Our Jamaica-men Trade thither indeed, and find the sweet of it.
1725 A. Pope tr. Homer Odyssey II. v. 152 Love, the only sweet of life.
1878 R. Browning La Saisiaz 310 Must..Every sweet warn ‘'Ware my bitter!’
plural.1583 B. Melbancke Philotimus (new ed.) sig. Ciii Alwayes shun such bitter sweets.1590 T. Lodge Rosalynde (1592) G iij Of all soft sweets, I like my mistris brest.1607 T. Middleton Revengers Trag. iv. sig. G An incredible Act..Twixt my Step-mother and the Bastard, oh, Incestuous sweetes betweene 'em.a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) i. i. 28 To sucke the sweets of sweete Philosophie. View more context for this quotation1694 E. Phillips tr. J. Milton Lett. of State 102 Your Lordships..who..enjoy the sweets of Peace both at home and abroad.1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis xi, in tr. Virgil Wks. 550 The Gods have envy'd me the sweets of Life.1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones I. iii. vi. 191 Surfeited with the Sweets of Marriage, or disgusted by its Bitters. View more context for this quotation1826 F. Reynolds Life & Times II. 436 Being now compelled daily, to taste more and more of the sweets of management.1858 R. S. Surtees Ask Mamma xlv. 200 Mr. Bankhead, knowing the sweets of office, again aspired to high places.1861 T. Hughes Tom Brown at Oxf. I. x. 164 The run..up to town to..taste some of the sweets of the season.
b. Contrasted with sweat.
ΚΠ
1588 T. Kyd tr. T. Tasso Housholders Philos. sig. *2v Gaine purchased with sweat or sweete.
1607 S. Hieron Spirituall Tillage in Wks. (1620) I. 397 We haue heard hitherto of the sweat, now let vs heare the sweet of religion.
1610 J. Mason Turke v. i Ere we had relisht the sweete of her sweete [sic], that is the fruit of her labors.
1668 J. Flavell Saint Indeed 186 He that will not have the sweat, must not expect the sweet of Religion.
1670 J. Ray Coll. Eng. Prov. 146 No sweet without some sweat.
4. A beloved person, darling, sweetheart. (Cf. sweet adj. 8c)In Middle English verse that swete is frequently used conventionally.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > loved one > [noun]
darlingc888
the apple of a person's eyeeOE
lief971
light of one's eye(s)OE
lovedOE
my lifelOE
lovec1225
druta1240
chere1297
sweetc1330
popelotc1390
likinga1393
oninga1400
onlepya1400
belovedc1430
well-beloved1447
heart-rootc1460
deara1500
delicate1531
belove1534
leefkyn1540
one and only1551
fondling1580
dearing1601
precious1602
loveling1606
dotey1663
lovee1753
passion1783
mavourneen1800
dote1809
treasure1844
seraph1853
sloe1884
darlint1888
asthore1894
darl1930
the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > [noun]
darlingc888
belamy?c1225
culver?c1225
dearc1230
sweetheartc1290
heartc1300
sweetc1330
honeya1375
dovec1386
jewelc1400
birdc1405
cinnamonc1405
honeycombc1405
lovec1405
wantonc1450
mulling?a1475
daisyc1485
crowdy-mowdy?a1513
honeysop?a1513
powsowdie?a1513
suckler?a1513
foolc1525
buttinga1529
whitinga1529
beautiful1534
turtle-dove1535
soula1538
heartikin1540
bully?1548
turtle1548
lamba1556
nyletc1557
sweet-lovea1560
coz1563
ding-ding1564
pugs1566
golpol1568
sparling1570
lover1573
pug1580
bulkin1582
mopsy1582
chuck1589
bonny1594
chick1594
sweetikin1596
ladybird1597
angel1598
muss1598
pinkany1599
sweetkin1599
duck1600
joy1600
sparrowc1600
sucket1605
nutting1606
chuckaby1607
tickling1607
bagpudding1608
heartling1608
chucking1609
dainty1611
flittermouse1612
honeysuckle1613
fubs1614
bawcocka1616
pretty1616
old thinga1625
bun1627
duckling1630
bulchin1633
bulch?c1640
sweetling1648
friscoa1652
ding-dongs1662
buntinga1668
cocky1680
dearie1681
chucky1683
lovey1684
machree1689
nykin1693
pinkaninny1696
nug1699
hinny1724
puss1753
pet1767
dovey1769
sweetie1778
lovey-dovey1781
lovely1791
ducky1819
toy1822
acushla1825
alanna1825
treat1825
amigo1830
honey child1832
macushla1834
cabbage1840
honey-bunch1874
angel pie1878
m'dear1887
bach1889
honey baby1895
prawn1895
hon1896
so-and-so1897
cariad1899
pumpkin1900
honey-bun1902
pussums1912
snookums1919
treasure1920
wogger1922
amico1929
sugar1930
baby cake1949
angel cake1951
lamb-chop1962
petal1974
bae2006
c1330 (?c1300) Guy of Warwick (Auch.) l. 4578 No y no loued non bot þat swete.
c1369 G. Chaucer Bk. Duchesse 832 Hyt was my swete ryght al hir selve.
a1500 R. Henryson tr. Æsop Fables: Cock & Fox l. 445 in Poems (1981) 21 At his end I did my besie curis To hald his heid..Syne at the last, the sweit swelt in my arme.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 10567 Myche sorow hade his Syre the sun to behold, And oft swonyt that swete, & in swyme felle.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet iii. iii. 161 Bidde my sweet prepare to childe.
1640 tr. G. S. du Verdier Love & Armes Greeke Princes iii. 66 Among the which [gentle~women] perceiving my Claristea (so is this inexorable sweet named) to be one.
1664 S. Butler Hudibras: Second Pt. ii. i. 29 This made the beauteous Queen of Crete To take a Town-Bull for her Sweet.
1703 tr. A. de Courtin Rules Civility (rev. ed.) 25 As, for a Governor, speaking of his Wife, to say,..My Sweet is the most prudent.
1855 Ld. Tennyson Maud xxi. xi, in Maud & Other Poems 71 She is coming, my own, my sweet.
1868 W. Morris Earthly Paradise i. 289 What feat do ye This eve in honour of my sweet and me?
5.
a. A sweet sound. poetic. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > pleasantness of sound > [noun] > a pleasant sound
noisec1390
sweetnessc1540
sweet1590
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. xii. sig. M4v Yett wist no creature, whence that heuenly sweet Proceeded.
b. plural. A woman's breasts. poetic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > front > breast or breasts (of woman) > [noun]
titOE
breastOE
mammaOE
pysea1400
mamellec1450
dug1530
duckya1533
bag1579
pommela1586
mam1611
Milky Way1622
bubby?1660
udder1702
globea1727
fore-buttock1727
tetty1746
breastwork?1760
diddy1788
snows1803
sweets1817
titty1865
pappy1869
Charleys1874
bub1881
breastiec1900
ninny1909
pair1919
boobs1932
boobya1934
fun bag1938
maraca1940
knockers1941
can1946
mammaries1947
bazooms1955
jug1957
melon1957
bosoms1959
Bristols1961
chichi1961
nork1962
puppies1963
rack1968
knob1970
dingleberry1980
jubblies1991
1817 J. Keats Poems 49 Ah! who can e'er forget so fair a being? Who can forget her half retiring sweets?
1870 D. G. Rossetti Poems (ed. 2) 111 Your silk ungirdled and unlac'd And warm sweets open to the waist.
6. Sweetness of smell, fragrance; plural sweet odours, scents, or perfumes. poetic.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [noun] > fragrant quality
sweetnessc900
sootnessc1000
redolence1447
suavityc1450
fragrancy1578
sweet1594
odoriferousness1599
fragrantness1600
muskiness1727
aromaticness1731
balsamicness1737
lightness1799
1594 M. Drayton Ideas Mirrour xxv. sig. E Some muz'd to see the earth enuy the ayre, Which from her lyps exhald refined sweet.
1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets xcix. sig. Gv More flowers I noted, yet I none could see, But sweet, or culler it had stolne from thee. View more context for this quotation
1612 J. Webster White Divel ii. i. 165 The naturall sweetes Of the Spring-violet.
a1718 M. Prior 2nd Hymn Callimachus 50 Perfumes distill their Sweets.
1785 W. Cowper Task i. 444 He..riots in the sweets of ev'ry breeze.
1820 P. B. Shelley To Skylark in Prometheus Unbound 204 The scent it gives Makes faint with too much sweet these heavy-winged thieves.
1821 J. Clare Village Minstrel II. 81 Perfuming evening with a luscious sweet.
7. plural. Substances having a sweet smell; fragrant flowers or herbs; †scents, perfumes. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [noun] > fragrant substance or perfume
pimentc1300
odoramentc1384
savouringc1384
odoura1425
aromatica1513
smella1533
fume1541
perfume1542
sweet-water?1543
scent1596
pomander1600
sweets1603
bisse1608
sweet-ball1617
plash1649
suffition1656
essence1661
odoratea1682
otto1822
aroma1830
nosegay1855
foo-foo1880
1603 W. Shakespeare Hamlet v. i. 239 Sweetes to the sweete.
1639–40 in H. J. F. Swayne Churchwardens' Accts. Sarum (1896) 320 Sweetes to burne in the Church at Chrismass.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 294 Through Groves of Myrrhe, And flouring Odours..; A Wilderness of sweets . View more context for this quotation
1691 London Gaz. No. 2641/4 The Bottle of Sweets [viz. perfume].
1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 257 Strew the deck With lavender, and sprinkle liquid sweets.
1837 H. Martineau Society in Amer. II. 63 The rich carnations and other sweets that bloomed in the garden.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
a. (Chiefly in sense 1e.)
sweet-box n.
sweet coupon n.
ΚΠ
1943 N. Last Diary 25 Dec. in Nella Last's War (1983) 270 Not a flower, a card—or a sweet, although you had the sweet coupons in your pocket.
1974 G. Markstein Cooler xlvi. 164 Grace spent all the sweet coupons he had left on buying a bar of chocolate.
sweet-maker n.
ΚΠ
1896 Westm. Gaz. 18 Mar. 8/2 A Hoxton sugar-boiler and sweet-maker.
sweet-making n.
ΚΠ
?1734 P. Shaw Chem. Lect. xi. sig. [M]4 The Art of Sweet-Making might receive a high Degree of Improvement, by using pure Sugar as one general wholesome Sweet, instead of those infinite Mixtures of Honey, Raisins, Syrups, Treacle, Stum, Cyder, &c. wherewith the Sweet-makers supply the Wine-Coopers.
sweet paper n.
ΚΠ
1964 Guardian 1 Feb. 8/3 An occasional sweetpaper flutters striped among the bushes.
1979 M. Ingate Tomb of Flowers xxi. 153 A few sweet papers, and one or two bottles.
sweet ration n.
ΚΠ
1944 Ourselves in Wartime vii. 154/2 More often than not, they forfeited their personal sweet ration, which amounted to 3 ozs. of sweets or chocolate a week in 1943, for the sake of the children.
1978 E. Malpass Wind brings up Rain i. 11 She tried to take back the toffee—she needed her sweet ration.
sweet rationing n.
ΚΠ
1942 Times 24 July 2/6 As a prelude to the introduction of chocolate and sweet rationing..there is heavy selling at some retail shops.
sweet-shop n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > trading place > place where retail transactions made > [noun] > shop > shop selling provisions > other provision shops
spicery1297
coffee shop1663
oil-shop1679
tea-shopa1745
sweet-shop1879
farm shop1924
1879 E. K. Bates Egyptian Bonds II. vi. 166 The sweet-shops, with their sugary wares.
sweet-stall n.
ΚΠ
1882 East. Daily Press 17 July 3 All day long the sweet stalls..were besieged by battalions of the common honey bee.
sweet-standing n.
ΚΠ
1902 ‘Q’ White Wolf 91 He had bought a packet off one of the sweet-standings.
b. (In sense 1d.)
sweet course n.
ΚΠ
1892 Girl's Own Paper 23 Apr. 476/2 The sweet course can also be arranged for by having some stewed fruit..with a mould of rice or cornflour.
1981 P. Van Greenaway ‘Cassandra’ Bell vii. 83 The evening meal..lasted ten minutes... Cherry stabbed a fork at his once or twice, derided the sweet course, and went.
C2.
sweet trolley n. a dining trolley from which a choice of cold sweet dishes may be offered in a restaurant.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > serving food > [noun] > utensils for serving > tea-trolley > sweet trolley
sweet trolley1963
1963 P.M.L.A. Dec. p. vii/2 [U.K.] sweet trolley: [U.S.] dessert cart.
1964 L. Deighton Funeral in Berlin xv. 93 The steak was O.K. and I was strong-willed enough not to hit the sweet-trolley too hard.
1981 Radio Times 19 Sept. 21/1 It's irritating being pointed at in a restaurant, like a sweet trolley.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1919; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

sweetadj.adv.

Brit. /swiːt/, U.S. /swit/
Forms: Old English swoete, Northumbrian suoet, suet, Old English–1500s swete, Middle English–1500s swet, Middle English–1500s suete, Middle English suet, Scottish sweyt, Middle English–1700s Scottish sweit, Middle English–1600s sweete, (Middle English sweote, Middle English swiete, Middle English suette, swett, squete, sweyte, Kent. zuete, Middle English swette, sqwete, swyte, 1500s Scottish sweitt, sueit, 1600s suiet, 1700s Scottish suit), 1500s– sweet. comparative Old English swet(t)ra, Middle English swettere, (Old English swoetra, Middle English swettre, swetture, Middle English swettore, swettour, Middle English swettir, swettur; Middle English squetter, suetter), Middle English swetter; Middle English swetere, Scottish swetare, 1500s Scottish swetar, suetar, Middle English– sweeter. superlative Old English–Middle English swetest, Middle English sweteste, Middle English swetist, Middle English– sweetest; also Middle English swetteste, Middle English swettest, Middle English swettist.
Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: Common Germanic: Old English swéte , = Old Frisian swêt , Old Saxon swôti , Middle Low German sote , sute , (Low German söte , söt ), Middle Dutch soete , suete (Dutch zoet ), Old High German suoȥi, swuoȥi (Middle High German sueȥe , German süss ), Old Norse sœ́tr (Swedish söt , Danish sød ) < Germanic *swōtja- , *swōti- , < swōt- (whence Old English swóte soot adv.) < Indo-European swād- (with variant swăd-), in Sanskrit svādús sweet, svádati to be sweet, Greek ἡδύς sweet, ἥδεσθαι to rejoice, ἡδονή pleasure, ἁνδάνειν (ἕαδον, ἕαδα) to please, Latin suāvis ( < *swādwis) sweet, suādēre to advise (properly, to make something pleasant to). Gothic shows another grade of the root in sūts.
A. adj.
1.
a. Pleasing to the sense of taste; having a pleasant taste or flavour; spec. having the characteristic flavour (ordinarily pleasant when not in excess) of sugar, honey, and many ripe fruits, which corresponds to one of the primary sensations of taste. Also said of the taste or flavour. Often opposed to bitter or sour (so also in figurative senses).See also special collocations in C. 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [adjective]
sweetc888
sootc950
doucea1350
sweetlya1350
softa1398
lusciousc1420
dulcet1440
mellite?1440
sugarishc1450
dulce1508
ambrosiana1522
figgy?1549
nut-sweet1586
nectaredc1595
dulcid1596
marmalady1602
fat1610
unsharp1611
unsour1611
marmalade1617
dulcorous1676
dulceous1688
saccharaceous1689
sugar-candyish1852
saccharic1945
c888 Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. xxxix. §9 Þæt is forhwi se gooda læce selle þam halum men seftne drenc & swetne.
OE Phoenix 193 Þonne feor ond neah þa swetestan somnað ond gædrað wyrta wynsume ond wudubleda to þam eardstede.
c1250 Death 106 in Old Eng. Misc. Hwer beoð þine dihsches Midd þine swete sonde?
1303 R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 1398 Delytable, & swete of sauoure.
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xii. 264 Þe larke..is..swifter þan þe pecok, And of flesch,..fatter and swetter.
1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. xix. 60 Somme [apples] ar swettere þan some and sonnere wollen rotye.
c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 67 Hony is swettist to him of alle othere metis.
?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. xiiii The yonger and the grener that the grasse is the softer and the sweter it wyl be.
1574 T. Newton tr. G. Gratarolo Direct. Health Magistrates & Studentes I j b The fleash that is about the bones is sweeter and better to digest then other.
1594 C. Marlowe & T. Nashe Dido ii. i Ile giue thee Sugar-almonds, sweete Conserues.
1596 Raigne of Edward III sig. D1v A sugred sweet, and most delitious tast. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 68 O Fruit Divine, Sweet of thy self, but much more sweet thus cropt. View more context for this quotation
1765 Museum Rusticum 4 398 Fine-flavoured, mellow, sweet beef from beasts fed with oil-cakes.
1819 W. Scott Bride of Lammermoor x, in Tales of my Landlord 3rd Ser. I. 279 A tart—a flam—and some nonsense sweet things, and comfits.
1827 M. Faraday Chem. Manip. xxiv. 620 The liquid will communicate a very aromatic sweet taste to it.
1882 R. Bentley Man. Bot. (ed. 4) iii. ii. 823 Secondary products of metastasis, some of which, as sweet secretions, &c., are necessary for the perpetuation of the species.
1883 Cassell's Dict. Cookery 772/1 Rose Sauce for Sweet Puddings.
b. In similative and other proverbial phr.
ΚΠ
c825 Vesp. Ps. xviii. 11 [xix. 10] Dulciora super mel & favum, swoetran ofer hunig & biobræd.
a1400–50 Wars Alex. 3855 Was neuir na hony in na hyue vndire heuen swettir.
c1403 J. Lydgate Temple Glas 1251 Swete is swettir eftir bitternes.
14.. Lat. & Eng. Prov. (Douce 52) lf. 16 b Hungur makyth harde bonys swete.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Miller's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 20 He hym self as sweete as is the roote Of Lycorys.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue i. viii. sig. C Swete meate wil haue sowre sauce.
a1556 N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister (?1566) i. iii. sig. B.ijv Soft fire maketh sweete malte, good Madge.
1607 S. Hieron Christians Iournall in Wks. (1620) I. 20 The sweet meats of wickednes will haue the sowre sauce of wretchednes and misery.
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) iii. ii. 107 Sweetest nut, hath sowrest rinde. View more context for this quotation
1671 T. Hunt Abecedarium Scholasticum 79 The sweetest flesh is next the bone.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Pastorals vii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 32 Fair Galathea, with thy silver Feet, O, whiter than the Swan, and more than Hybla sweet.
1721 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. (at cited word) After sweet Meat comes sowr Sauce.
1898 W. W. Jacobs Choice Spirits in Sea Urchins (1906) 90 ‘The meat's awful.’ ‘It's as sweet as nuts,’ said the skipper.
2.
a. Pleasing to the sense of smell; having a pleasant smell or odour; fragrant. Also said of the smell or odour.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [adjective]
sweet900
sootc950
aromatic1366
merrya1398
well-smellinga1398
sweet-smellingc1400
lusciousc1420
savoury?a1425
redolingc1429
redolent?a1439
odorate?1440
flagrant1450
redolentc1450
well-savouringc1450
aromatous1483
softa1500
well-aired1505
balmy1508
ambrosiana1522
embalmeda1529
fragrantc1530
perfumed1538
scented?c1562
scented1567
balm-like1569
sweet1573
aromatizate1576
aromatical1578
Sabaeana1586
ambrosial1590
rich1590
perfumed1591
sweet-scented1591
reperfumed1593
balm-breathing1595
nectaredc1595
spiced1600
fuming1601
fumed1612
scentful1612
balsam1624
perfumy1625
odoraminous1656
aroma-olent1657
suaveolent1657
aromatized1661
essenced1675
balsamy1687
flavorous1697
balsamic1714
well-scented1726
scenty1738
breathing1757
spicy1765
flavouriferous1773
aromal1848
bescented1863
euodic1868
nosy1892
900 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) iii. viii. 174 Hordærn..balsami & þara deorwyrðestena wyrta & þara swetestena þara þe in middangearde wæron.
971 Blickl. Hom. 59 Þa swetan stencas gestincað þara wuduwyrta.
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 53 Þe sweote smel of þe chese.
c1220 Bestiary 508 Vt of his ðrote is smit an onde, Ðe swetteste ðing ðat is o londe.
a1272 Lune Ron 151 in Old Eng. Misc. 97 Þu art swetture þane eny flur.
a1300 Cursor Mundi 1381 Cipres, be þe suete sauur, Bitakens ur suete [Fairf. squete] sauueur.
c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 5 Zephirus..wt his sweete breeth.
c1425 Cast. Persev. 801 in Macro Plays 101 Parkys, poundys, & many pens, Þei semyn to ȝou swetter þanne sens.
1542 A. Borde Compend. Regyment Helth xx. sig. K.iv Parsley..doth cause a man to haue a swete breth.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream ii. i. 252 I know a banke..Quite ouercanopi'd..With sweete muske roses, and with Eglantine. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) Induct. i. 47 Burne sweet Wood to make the Lodging sweete. View more context for this quotation
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine iii. 382 Pillasters..of..Almuggin trees..which, if odoriferous,..made that passage as sweet to the smell, as specious to the sight.
1782 W. Cowper Hope in Poems 156 Sweet scent, or lovely form, or both combin'd.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lxxxiv. 124 Sweet after showers, ambrosial air. View more context for this quotation
b. spec. Perfumed, scented. See also sweet-bag n., sweet-ball n., sweet-powder n. at Compounds 1a, sweet-water n. 2a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [adjective]
sweet900
sootc950
aromatic1366
merrya1398
well-smellinga1398
sweet-smellingc1400
lusciousc1420
savoury?a1425
redolingc1429
redolent?a1439
odorate?1440
flagrant1450
redolentc1450
well-savouringc1450
aromatous1483
softa1500
well-aired1505
balmy1508
ambrosiana1522
embalmeda1529
fragrantc1530
perfumed1538
scented?c1562
scented1567
balm-like1569
sweet1573
aromatizate1576
aromatical1578
Sabaeana1586
ambrosial1590
rich1590
perfumed1591
sweet-scented1591
reperfumed1593
balm-breathing1595
nectaredc1595
spiced1600
fuming1601
fumed1612
scentful1612
balsam1624
perfumy1625
odoraminous1656
aroma-olent1657
suaveolent1657
aromatized1661
essenced1675
balsamy1687
flavorous1697
balsamic1714
well-scented1726
scenty1738
breathing1757
spicy1765
flavouriferous1773
aromal1848
bescented1863
euodic1868
nosy1892
1573–4 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 208 Sweete lightes of white wex for the same viis.
1592 Acct.-bk. W. Wray in Antiquary (1896) 32 79 A barrell swet sop, xxix s.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) iv. iv. 249 You promis'd me a tawdry-lace, and a paire of sweet Gloues. View more context for this quotation
1656 Earl of Monmouth tr. Polit. Touch-stone in tr. T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso 407 The Monopoly of making sweet Gloves to that Nation whose hand did stink insufferably.
3.
a. Free from offensive or disagreeable taste or smell; not corrupt, putrid, sour, or stale; free from taint or noxious matter; in a sound and wholesome condition.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > conducive to health > non-infective
sweeta1325
cleanc1384
gnotobiotic1949
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3302 A funden trew ðor-inne dede Moyses, and it wurð swet on ðe stede.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 6352, l. 6354 Þe water was al suete alson, þe water þat sua fuli stanc, Suetter neuer þai siþen drank.
1501 Reg. Privy Seal Scotl. I. 100/1 [3½] lastis of salmond, ful, rede, and swete.
1596 J. Harington New Disc. Aiax sig. E4v Because hee had not seene better to the keeping sweet of the streets.
1607 T. Dekker & J. Webster West-ward Hoe i. sig. B2v He hath an excellent trick to keepe Lobsters and Crabs sweet in summer.
1663 Marquis of Worcester Cent. Names & Scantlings Inventions § 100 [They] furnish Cities with Water..as well as keep them Sweet, running through several Streets.
1681 T. Langford Plain Instr. Fruit-trees xv. 139 Cyder Fruit..laid upon a sweet and dry floor, in a heap.
1685 Compl. Servant Maid 144 You must wash your own Linen, keeping your self sweet and clean.
1754 Compl. Cyder-man 114 A sufficient Number of sweet Casks to put it into.
1791 Trans. Soc. Arts 9 p. xvii Preserving Fresh Water sweet, for the use of Seamen during long voyages.
1859 J. M. Jephson & L. Reeve Narr. Walking Tour Brittany v. 55 I question whether the beds would be so clean and sweet.
1861 I. M. Beeton Bk. Househ. Managem. xvii. 380 In choosing a ham, ascertain that it is perfectly sweet.
1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Sweet, free from fire-damp or other gases, or from fire-stink.
b. spec. Of water: Fresh, not salt. Also of butter: Fresh, not salted. (Cf. German süsswasser, French eau douce, etc.) See also sweet-water n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > water > [adjective] > fresh
freshOE
sweetc1000
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preserving or pickling > [adjective] > preserved with salt > not
unbrined1733
sweet1925
c1000 Sax. Leechd. II. 134 Drince wegbrædan seaw on swetum wætre.
c1220 Bestiary 320 He lepeð ðanne wið mikel list, Of swet water he haueð ðrist.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 6349 Þei fond..Watir bittur as any bryne As bryne hit was & no swettur.
1481 W. Caxton tr. Myrrour of Worlde xx. 109 Alle watres come of the see; as wel the swete as the salt.
1553 R. Eden tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India sig. Gj In this deserte are..founde bytter waters: but more often fresshe and sweete waters.
1591 A. W. Bk. Cookrye (rev. ed.) 8 b In the seething pot put in a peece of sweet Butter.
1661 R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia Isagoge sig. A7 Living in rivers and other sweet waters.
1709 T. Robinson Ess. Nat. Hist. Westmorland & Cumberland iv. 23 The subterrene Waters are those sweet Mineral Feeders, which do implete the Body of the Earth.
1796 J. Morse Amer. Universal Geogr. (new ed.) I. 84 Animals which..live alternately on land or in sweet water.
1925 N.Y. Produce Rev. & Amer. Creamery 27 May 95 (advt.) Specializing in sweet butter.
1952 M. Small Special Diet Cook Bk. 201 Grocers..catering to the Jewish trade usually carry sweet butter.
1971 S. Walker Highland Cookbk. 8 Scones are delicious with sweet butter, in Scotland called fresh butter.
c. Of bread (in 16th cent. versions of and allusions to Scripture): Unleavened. (Opposed to sour as in sourdough n.) Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > [adjective] > unleavened
tharfc950
tharflingc1050
unbarmedc1175
unlifa1325
sweet1526
unleavened1530
matzo1846
leavenless1852
society > faith > artefacts > consumables > bread > [adjective] > unleavened
tharfc950
sweet1526
unleavened1530
azymous1728
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Mark xiv. f. lxvj The fyrst daye of swete breed.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Exod. xxxiv. 18 The feast of swete bred shalt thou kepe.
1593 T. Nashe Christs Teares f. 20 The feast of Tabernacles, the feast of sweet Bread, and the feast of Weekes.
d. Of milk: Fresh, not sour: see sweet milk n. at Compounds 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dairy produce > [adjective] > relating to milk > fresh
sweet1812
1812 J. Sinclair Acct. Syst. Husbandry Scotl. i. 105 The milk can be sold sweet, as taken from the cow.
e. Old Chemistry and Metallurgy. Free from corrosive salt, sulphur, acid, etc. In modern use also in the Oil Industry, of petroleum or natural gas: free from sulphur compounds, esp. hydrogen sulphide or alkyl mercaptans.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > chemical properties > [adjective] > of or relating to miscellaneous other properties
sweet1666
nimble1671
watery1741
unvitriolized1757
greedy1758
unneutralized1758
unvitrifiable1758
free1783
fixed1800
nascent1800
inorganic1831
assimilative1837
unnitrogenized1846
inactive1848
kaligenous1854
unacceptant1866
aggressive1888
oligodynamic1893
chromotropic1899
undissociated1899
osmophoric1901
thermochromic1904
unary1923
non-stoichiometric1943
odoriphoric1944
slow-release1946
sonoluminescent1961
uniaxial1965
the world > the earth > minerals > types of mineral > hydrocarbon minerals > [adjective] > coal > other qualities of coal
knobbly1839
sweet1863
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > oil or types of oil > [adjective]
sweet1919
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > mineral material > mineral oil > [adjective] > type of mineral oil
sweet1919
multigrade1959
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > gas or types of gas > [adjective]
lean1924
wet1926
liquefied1930
sweet1950
1666 R. Boyle Origine Formes & Qualities ii. iv. 315 Chymists..terme the Calces of Metals and other Bodies dulcifi'd, if they be freed from all corrosive salts and sharpness of Tast, sweet, though they have nothing at all of positive sweetness.
1863 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 411 The ‘sweetest’ kinds of coal (the freest from sulphur) are reserved for the smelting furnace.
1881 Trans. Amer. Inst. Mining Engineers 1880–1 9 169 Good, dead, or sweet roasting is complete roasting, i. e., carried on until sulphurous and arsenious fumes cease to be given off.
1911 Rep. 80th Meeting Brit. Assoc. Advancem. Sci. 1910 612 The Coal Measures include ‘sweet’, i.e., non-sulphurous, coals at several horizons.
1919 E. W. Dean Motor Gasoline Properties (U.S. Bur. Mines Techn. Paper No. 214) 25 If the liquid remains unchanged in color and if the sulphur film is bright yellow or only slightly discolored.., the test shall be reported negative and the gasoline considered ‘sweet’.
1950 Industr. & Engin. Chem. Sept. 1882/2 Several high sulfur gas oils were reduced in sulfur contents to those of gas oils from sweet crudes by hydrodesulfurization..at 750°F., 300 pounds per square inch pressure,..and 1000 cubic feet of hydrogen per barrel of charge.
1975 Offshore Engineer Sept. 44/3 The sweet gas is extracted through wells drilled by a Saipem rig.
1980 Blair & Ketchum's Country Jrnl. Oct. 6/3 Light, so-called ‘sweet’, crude yields a high percentage of automotive gasoline.
4.
a. Pleasing to the ear; having or giving a pleasant sound; musical, melodious, harmonious: said of a sound, a voice, an instrument, a singer or performer on an instrument.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > [adjective]
winsomea900
sweetc900
likingeOE
i-quemec950
lieflyOE
winlyOE
hereOE
thankfulc1000
merryOE
queemc1175
beina1200
willea1200
leesomec1200
savouryc1225
estea1250
i-wilc1275
winc1275
welcomea1300
doucea1350
well-pleasingc1350
acceptablea1382
pleasablea1382
pleasanta1382
pleaseda1382
acceptedc1384
amiablec1384
well-likinga1387
queemfulc1390
flattering1393
pleasinga1398
well-queeminga1400
comelyc1400
farrandc1400
greable1401
goodlyc1405
amicable?a1425
placablec1429
amene1433
winful1438
listyc1440
dulcet1445
agreeablec1450
favourousc1485
sweetly?a1500
pleasureful?c1502
dulcea1513
grate1523
prettya1529
plausible1541
jolly1549
dulcoratec1550
toothsome1551
pleasurable1557
tickling1558
suavec1560
amenous1567
odoriferous?1575
perfumed1580
glada1586
tickle1593
pleasurous1595
favoursome1601
dulcean1606
gratifying1611
Hyblaean1614
gratulatea1616
arrident1616
solacefula1618
pleasantable1619
placid1628
contentsome1632
sapid1640
canny1643
gustful1647
peramene1657
pergrateful1657
tastefula1659
complacent1660
placentiousa1661
gratifactorya1665
bland1667
suavious1669
palatable1683
placent1683
complaisant1710
nice1747
tasty1796
sweetsome1799
titbit1820
connate1836
cunning1843
mooi1850
gemütlich1852
sympathique1859
congenial1878
sympathetic1900
sipid1908
onkus1910
sympathisch1911
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > pleasantness of sound > [adjective]
sweetc900
merryOE
well-soundingc1350
sootc1385
soundedc1450
honeyed1592
well-tuned1592
ear-tickling1605
mellisonanta1635
euphonical1668
euphonious1774
euphonous1805
euphonic1814
euphonistic1837
listenable1920
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > quality of voice > [adjective] > pleasant
sweetc900
softc1230
well relesedc1475
chanting1561
satin1635
luting1887
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > [adjective] > melodious or harmonious
sweetc900
merryOE
softc1230
accordanta1325
well-soundingc1350
cordant1382
sootc1385
songfula1400
melodiousa1425
sugaredc1430
well-toneda1500
tunable1504
dulcea1513
equivalenta1513
consonant?1521
harmonicala1527
harmoniousc1550
consorteda1586
Orphean1593
concentful1595
melodical1596
sweet-recording1598
tuneful1598
sirenical1599
high-tuned1603
nightingale-like1611
soundful?1615
according1626
modulaminous1637
undiscording1645
canorous1646
symphonious1652
concinnous1654
consonous1654
harmonic1667
sirenica1704
symphonial1773
concentual1782
chantant1785
Memnonian1800
melodized1807
Orphic1817
undiscordant1819
concentuous1850
fluting1852
melodic1871
well-orchestrated1872
jarless1876
tuny1885
tunesome1890
c900 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) iv. iii. 264 Þa geherde he..þa swetestan stefne & þa fægrestan singendra.
a1300 Cursor Mundi 1030 Þar sune es soft and suet sang.
?a1366 Romaunt Rose 768 In loreyn her notes bee Fulle swetter than in this contre.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. xv. 178 A, myghtfull God, Whateuer this ment, So swete of toyn?
c1500 Melusine (1895) i. 7 He stood styl..to here her swette & playsaunt voyce.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 278/1 Swetetunyng, modulation.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. ccxiiiiv iiii. Muses plaiyng on seueral swete instrumentes.
1560 Bible (Geneva) 2 Sam. xxiii. 1 Dauid..the swete singer of Israel.
1599 W. Shakespeare et al. Passionate Pilgrime (new ed.) sig. C8 Cleare wels spring not, sweete birds sing not.
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. i. 161 Like sweet bells iangled out of time, and harsh. View more context for this quotation
1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies vii. iii. 500 Their tongue and pronountiation is very sweete and pleasant.
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 152 A paire of Organs doth make sweet musicke.
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics iv, in tr. Virgil Wks. 143 Th' Infernal Troops..list'ning, crowd the sweet Musician's side. View more context for this quotation
1780 W. Cowper Doves 37 Thus sang the sweet sequester'd bird, Soft as the passing wind.
1859 Ld. Tennyson Enid in Idylls of King 18 The sweet voice of a bird.
1878 G. Dubourg Violin (ed. 5) i. 11 The viol instruments were decidedly sweet, but comparatively dull.
b. Hence, applied to music, esp. jazz, played at a steady tempo without improvisation, or to this style of playing and its exponents. Cf. hot adj. 12h. Originally and chiefly U.S.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > jazz > [adjective] > types of
Chicagoan1861
bad1897
hot1918
red-hot1918
soft1921
low-down1922
sweet1924
barrel-house1926
New Orleans1926
straight1926
crazy1927
dirty1927
hotcha1930
jungle1935
solid1935
traditional jazz1935
powerhouse1937
gutty1939
riffy1939
jivey1944
Kansas City1946
cool1948
West Coast1949
far-out1954
nutty1955
swinging1955
mainstream1957
Afro-Latin1958
1924 Variety 9 July 9/3 The style in vaudeville jazz bands this coming season will tend toward the ‘sweet’ and ‘hot’ dance orchestras.
1927 Melody Maker May 477/1 A really good saxophonist..must be able to render a sweet melody correctly phrased and as though his soul were in it, without a trend to exaggerate sloppy sentiment.
1933 Fortune Aug. 47/1 He is decidedly not a sweet trombonist—he doesn't play sentimentally with lots of vibrato.
1934 S. R. Nelson All about Jazz iii. 66 If it is of the melody type, and without much syncopation, the number is treated in the ‘sweet’ manner.
1956 A. Hodeir Jazz: its Evolution & Essence viii. 129 Both ‘straight’ jazz and ‘sweet’ music..make use of a sonority and a melodic and harmonic language that are exaggeratedly sugar-coated.
1981 Oxf. Times 6 Feb. 13/1 The Dorseys' orchestra at this time was sweet rather than swinging, which will disappoint those like myself who prefer the jazzier side of Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey.
5. Pleasing (in general); yielding pleasure or enjoyment; agreeable, delightful, charming. (Only literary in unemotional use: cf. A. 3e)
a. to the mind or feelings.
ΚΠ
c888 Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. xxxv. §4 Hi..meahton eaðe seggan soðspell, gif him þa leasunga næren swetran.
c900 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) v. xxiii. 482 Me symble swete & wynsum wæs, ðæt ic oþþe leornode oþþe lærde oððe write.
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 33 Ac swo þe wowe þinkeð biter, þe hwile þe he lesteð, swo þincð wele þe swettere þan hit cumeð þarafter.
c1230 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Corpus Cambr.) (1962) 152 Drif as he dude þet swete licunge in to smeortunge.
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 210 Paradis, An erd al ful of swete blis.
c1330 (?a1300) Sir Tristrem (1886) l. 631 Þe ring was fair to se, Þe ȝift was wel swete.
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xv. 179 Þough he bere hem no bred, he bereth hem swetter lyflode.
c1390 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Vernon) (1867) A. Prol. 83 Persones and parisch prestes..askeþ leue..To singe þer for Simonye, for seluer is swete.
1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. xxi. 219 He hadde nat wist wyterly wheþer deþ wer soure oþer sweyte.
c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 66 In the historial parties of the Oold Testament and of the Newe, is miche delectable and sweete.
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cccxxxvijv How swete is ye name of peace, and how comfortable a thing it is.
1567 J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 4v [It] is otherwise effectuous to bring a man in sweete sleepe.
1575 G. Gascoigne Glasse of Gouernem. iv. vi. sig. Iiiiv Although it seeme vnto some men a sweete thing to commaunde.
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iii. iv. 185 + 8 O tis most sweete When in one line two crafts directly meete.
a1616 W. Shakespeare As you like It (1623) ii. i. 12 Sweet are the vses of aduersitie. View more context for this quotation
1616 B. Jonson Epicœne iv. v, in Wks. I. 579 Ô reuenge, how sweet art thou! View more context for this quotation
1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 119 Art, abounding with many sweet vices, drew still the eyes..of unadvised spectators.
1650 J. Trapp Clavis to Bible (Gen. xl. 3) 310 A sweet providence; that these obnoxious Officers should be sent to Joseph's prison.
1744 J. Wesley & C. Wesley Coll. Psalms & Hymns (new ed.) i. 51 When He vouchsafes our Hands to use, It makes the Labour sweet.
1785 W. Cowper Task ii. 482 Oh, popular applause, what heart of man Is proof against thy sweet seducing charms?
1785 W. Cowper Task i. 94 Sweet sleep enjoys the curate in his desk.
1801 W. Wordsworth Sparrow's Nest 19 A heart, the fountain of sweet tears.
1876 M. E. Braddon Joshua Haggard's Daughter II. i. 22 It was sweeter to you to help others than to be happy yourself.
1882 W. Ballantine Some Exper. Barrister's Life iv. 41 I received half a guinea, the sweetest that ever found its way into my pocket.
b.
(a) to the senses; esp. to the sight = Lovely, of charming appearance.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > aesthetic quality or good taste > [adjective] > pleasing to the aesthetic sense
gentc1300
sweet?a1366
comelyc1400
pretty1442
poetical1447
beautifula1586
concinnous1662
poetic1731
?a1366 Romaunt Rose 622 And thus he walketh to solace Hym and his folk for swetter place To pleyn ynne he may not fynde.
c1430 Chev. Assigne 44 A seluer cheyne Eche on of hem hadde, a-bowte his swete swyre.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xvi. 66 Quhen byrdis syngis on the spray,..For softnes of that sweit sesoune.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii. x. sig. Y2v Warlike Cæsar, tempted with the name Of this sweet Island.
1617 F. Moryson Itinerary i. 99 The place where the Marchants meete, called la Loggia, lying vpon the sea, is as sweete an open roome, as euer I saw.
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. iv. 137 The sweetest face, the youngest age, and whitest skin was in greatest value and request.
1645 R. Symonds Diary (1859) 175 His Majestie lay at Mr. Crompton's howse, a sweet place in a fyne parke.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1646 (1955) II. 483 This sweete Towne, has more well built Palaces than any of its dimensions in all Italy.
1812 Ld. Byron Childe Harold: Cantos I & II i. lxxix. 47 On high The corse [of the bull killed in the bull-fight] is pil'd—sweet sight for vulgar eyes.
1837 T. Campbell in Lit. Gaz. 23 Dec. 812 It was as sweet an Autumn day As ever shone on Clyde.
1843 G. Borrow Bible in Spain II. viii. 169 It is a sweet spot, and the prospect which opens from it is extensive.
(b) The phr. sweet in (the, one's) bed has been used with various implications.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual desire > [adjective] > causing sexual excitement or desire
sweet in (the, one's) beda1300
provocatoryc1443
provocative?a1505
marrow-burning?1592
marrow-eating1593
marrow-melting1593
tickle1604
marrow-boiling1605
venereous1611
venerious1620
veneral1651
aphrodisiacal1719
erogenic1887
erogenous1889
erotogenic1909
erotogenous1928
pervy1945
bodacious1991
a1300 Havelok 2927 [He] dide him þere sone wedde Hire þat was ful swete in bedde.
1721 J. Kelly Compl. Coll. Scotish Prov. 290 Sweet in the Bed, and sweir up in the Morning, was never a good Housewife.
a1800 in Laing Sel. Anc. Pop. P. Scotl. (1822) xxiii. Introd. A Clown is a Clown both at home and abroad; When a Rake he is comely, and sweet in his bed.
c. Of song or discourse, and hence transferred of a poet, orator, etc., with mixture of sense A. 4: Pleasing to the ear and mind; pleasant to hear or listen to; sometimes implying ‘persuasive, winning’, †or in bad sense, ‘alluring, enticing’.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > [adjective] > having pleasing speech or eloquent > pleasing (of speech)
well-spoken?a1400
sweetc1405
honeyc1450
mellifluous?a1475
mellifluate1508
well-spoken1539
mellifluent1601
suaviloquent1656
c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 267 Somwhat he lypsed for his wantownesse To make his englyssh sweete vp on his tonge.
1423 Kingis Quair iv His metir suete..full of moralitee.
a1500 R. Henryson in tr. Æsop Fables Prol. l. 3 in Poems (1981) 3 Thair polite termes of sweit rhetore.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Rom. xvi. 18 By swete preachynges and flatterynge wordes [they] deceave the hertes of the innocentes.
a1533 Ld. Berners tr. A. de Guevara Golden Bk. M. Aurelius (1546) sig. E.j He was so swete in his wordes, that many tymes he was harde more than thre houres togyther.
1612 J. Brinsley Ludus Lit. xiii. 175 Such a one [sc. book] as is most easie, both for the sweetest Latine and choisest matter.
1645 J. Milton L'Allegro in Poems 36 Sweetest Shakespear fancies childe.
1746 P. Francis tr. Horace Art of Poetry 113 Whose rapid Numbers, suited to the Stage,..With sweet Variety were found to please.
d. ironically: cf. fine adj. 7c.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > suffering > displeasure > [adjective] > unpleasant
loatha700
unsweetc890
grimlyc893
unquemeOE
un-i-quemeOE
evila1131
sourc1175
illc1220
unhightlyc1275
unwelcomec1325
unblithec1330
unnetc1330
unrekena1350
unagreeablec1374
uncouthc1380
unsavouryc1380
displeasantc1386
unlikinga1398
ungaina1400
crabbedc1400
unlovelyc1400
displeasing1401
eschewc1420
unsoot1420
mislikinga1425
unlikelya1425
unlustya1425
fastidiousc1425
unpleasantc1430
displicable1471
unthankfulc1475
displeasant1481
uneasy1483
unpleasinga1500
unfaring1513
badc1530
malpleasant?1533
noisome1542
thanklessa1547
ungrate1548
untoothsome1548
ungreeable1550
contrary1561
disagreeable1570
offensible1575
offensive1576
naughty1578
delightlessa1586
undelightful1585
unwisheda1586
unpleasurable1587
undelightsomec1595
dislikeful1596
disliking1596
ungrateful1596
unsweet?a1600
distastive1600
impleasing1602
distasting1603
distasteful1607
unsightly1608
undelectable1610
disgustful1611
unrelishing1611
waspisha1616
undeliciousa1618
unwished-for1617
disrelishing1631
unenjoyed1643
unjoyous1645
mirya1652
unwelcomed1651
unpleasivea1656
sweet1656
injucund1657
insuave1657
unpalatable1658
unhandsome1660
undesirable1667
disrelishablea1670
uncouthsome1684
shocking1703
nasty1705
embittering1746
indelectable1751
undelightinga1774
nice and ——1796
unenjoyablea1797
ungenial1796
uncomplacent1805
ungracious1807
bitter1810
rotten1813
uncongenial1813
quarrelsome1825
grimy1833
nice1836
unrelished1863
bloody1867
unbewitching1876
ferocious1877
displeasurable1879
rebarbative1892
charming1893
crook1898
naar1900
peppery1901
negative1902
poisonous1906
off-putting1935
unsympathetic1937
piggy1942
funky1946
umpty1948
pooey1967
minging1970
Scrooge-like1976
sucky1984
stank1991
stanky1991
1656 G. Collier Vindiciæ Thesium de Sabbato (new ed.) ix. 18 Here's another sweet inference.
1677 G. Miege New Dict. French & Eng. ii. sig. Cccv/2 I should have made a sweet business on't for my self.
1725 T. Thomas in MSS. Dk. Portland (Hist. MSS. Comm.) VI. 133 We had a specimen of the sweet road we were to clamber through,..a pretty sharp ascent..full of loose, ragged stones.
1850 F. E. Smedley Frank Fairlegh xl. 334 Oh! they made a sweet row, I can assure you.
e. In colloquial use, an emotional epithet expressive of the speaker's personal feelings as to the attractiveness of the object.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > attractiveness > [adjective]
gracious1340
glorious skinnyc1400
drawing1435
gracefulc1449
attrayant1477
well-favoured1539
alluring1567
graceda1586
attracting1589
attractive1592
winning1596
appealing1598
taking1603
allicient1613
enchantinga1616
motive1615
temptinga1616
allurant1631
catchinga1640
gaining1642
canny1643
charmful1656
charming1664
mignon1671
disarminga1718
prepossessing1737
seducing1749
seductive176.
eye-catching1770
sweet1779
catchy1784
attaching1785
engaging1816
cute1834
cunning1843
taky1854
cynosural1855
smart1860
fetching1880
seductious1883
fruity1900
barry1923
hot stuff1928
swoony1934
dishy1961
dolly1964
jiggy1996
aegyo2007
1779 Mirror No. 41. ⁋7 Miss Betsy had taken down some sweet copies of verses, as she called them, in her memorandum book.
1782 F. Burney Cecilia I. i. iv. 45 She has all Paris in her disposal; the sweetest caps! the most beautiful trimmings! and her ribbons are quite divine!
1840 W. M. Thackeray Barber Cox in Comic Almanack 25 Honourable Tom Fitz-Warter, cousin of Lord Byron's; smokes all day; and has written the sweetest poems you can imagine.
1884 Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 22 Nov. 2/5 A new fashion in false hair is quite sweet.
1887 A. Jessopp Arcady viii. 240 She falls in love with some sweet thing in hats or handkerchiefs.
f. Used as an intensifier in certain slang phrases (often of a coarse nature) meaning ‘nothing at all’. See also F.A. n. at F n. Initialisms 3a, Fanny Adams n. 2, S.F.A. n. at S n.1 Initialisms 1. Also sweet nothing.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adjective] > utter or absolute > implying negative
colossal1855
effing1929
cuntinga1935
focking1956
sweet1958
twatting1967
1958 F. Norman Bang to Rights i. 28 You can do sweet B.A. about it.
1959 I. Opie & P. Opie Lore & Lang. Schoolchildren xvii. 365 They stand on the field and they rave and they shout On subjects they know sweet nothing about.
1973 B. Broadfoot Ten Lost Years ix. 95 The government provided sweet bugger all. Absolutely sweet bugger all.
1973 B. Turner Hot-foot vi. 43 What had I gained for my trouble? Sweet nothing, that's what.
6. In extended use: Having an agreeable or benign quality, influence, operation, or effect. Chiefly technical: see quots.
a. Favourable, genial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > [adjective] > advantageous or favourable
likinga1387
friendlya1398
sweetc1400
propice1443
favourablec1460
towardly1520
propitious1581
aspectful1611
auspiciousa1616
benigna1631
fautive1667
benevolenta1676
bright1684
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > [adjective] > and pleasing
goodeOE
graciousa1398
sweetc1400
graceda1586
cushty1929
c1400 (?c1380) Patience l. 236 Styffe stremes & streȝt hem strayned a whyle..Tyl a swetter ful swyþe hem sweȝed to bonk.
1594 H. Plat Diuerse Sorts of Soyle 50 in Jewell House Some further & sweeter helps for her barren groundes.
1824 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening (ed. 2) §3295 After the bed has come to a sweet heat, shut down close at night.
b. Of land, products, or the like: Free from bitter or similar deleterious qualities.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > quality of being satisfactory > [adjective]
wellOE
sufferablea1340
worthy1340
sufficient1489
paregala1500
competent1535
something like?1556
right1567
sweet1577
fairish1611
all right1652
fair1656
comfortable1658
decent1711
respectable1750
unrepulsive1787
decentisha1814
fair-to-middling1822
fine1828
christena1838
OK1839
tidy1844
not (or none) so dusty?1856
sweet1898
oke1928
okey-doke1934
okey-dokey1936
tickety-boo1939
cool1951
aight1993
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry i. f. 24 The land..is..called pleasaunt ground, sweete, blacke, rotten, and mellowed, which are the signes of good ground.
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball vi. xxiv. 688 Bay..groweth plentifully..by the sea syde in saltishe groundes..and dieth not in the winter season, as it doth in sweete groundes.
1649 W. Blith Eng. Improver xxiii. 140 Which sorts of Land if Rich, and Sweet, will lose Advance by Ploughing.
1765 Museum Rusticum 3 239 The land most suitable for this plant [sc. teazel] is that of a thin sweet surface, and marly bottom.
1839 R. I. Murchison Silurian Syst. i. x. 135 From its sulphureous properties, it is also preferred to coal of the sweetest and best quality.
1840 Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 3 296/2 Iron of an excellent quality, which they term sweet-iron.
c. Easily managed, handled, or dealt with; working or moving easily or smoothly.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > duping, making a fool of > [adjective] > fooled, duped
foolified1584
fool-taken1608
cozened1610
gullified1624
gulled1647
sweet1673
bubbled1681
bilked1682
imposed-upon1706
cheated1709
duped1756
pigeoned1777
swindled1809
thimblerigged1840
befooled1842
bamboozled1866
spoofed1958
dicked1972
the world > action or operation > easiness > [adjective] > not hindering or encumbering > not hindered or encumbered > operating or progressing easily
current1577
expedite1578
glib1594
facile1607
well-oiled1614
well-going1623
undisobliging1715
sweet1725
swimming1768
the world > action or operation > advantage > convenience > [adjective] > easily managed
handsome1440
wieldya1450
maniable1484
willing?a1513
tractable1555
wieldsome1565
manuable1594
manageable1598
handleable1611
subject1619
manuala1631
handy1640
flippant1677
wieldablea1688
clever1715
able1741
habile1741
docile1774
sweet1883
hand-tame1911
1673 R. Head Canting Acad. 192 The fourteenth a Gamester, if he sees the Hic sweet, He presently drops down a Cog in the street.
1725 New Canting Dict. Sweet, easy to be taken in: Also expert, dexterous, clever: As, Sweet's your Hand, said of one who has the Knack of stealing by Sleight of Hand.
1801 J. Strutt Glig-gamena Angel-ðeod i. i. 16 Beasts of sweet flight,..the buck, the doe, the bear, the rein deer, the elk, and the spytard.
1883 R. L. Stevenson Treasure Island ii. vii. 55 You never imagined a sweeter schooner—a child might sail her.
1915 Blackwood's Mag. Sept. 316/1 She was a sweet ship in a seaway if one knew her idiosyncrasies.
1937 Times 11 Dec. 4/7 The engine is, in my opinion, more responsive and sweet than its predecessor.
1955 Times 10 May 7/6 The clutch is exceptionally sweet in operation, a point which helps to make the car easily manoeuvrable.
1975 Washington Post 25 Jan. a19/1 As J. Robert Oppenheimer said of the hydrogen bomb: ‘It was so technically sweet, we had to do it.’
d. Art. Delicate, soft. Obsolete. (Cf. sweeten v. 8b.)
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > work of art > [adjective] > qualities of work of art
uniforma1552
sweet1662
stiff1779
chargeda1806
late1851
ineffective1858
detailed1867
schematic1868
rhythmical1880
functional1881
late-period1927
engaged1947
engagé1955
retardataire1958
1662 J. Evelyn Sculptura iv. 66 So sweet, even and bold was his work.
1662 W. Faithorne Art of Graveing & Etching xvii. 21 It is at the first operation, that you are to cover all the faintest and sweetest places.
7. transferred (chiefly in phr.) Fond of or inclined for sweet things, esp. in sweet tooth n. at Compounds 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > [adjective] > having (good) appetite > having appetite for specific kind of food
sweet-mouthed1542
sweeta1616
sweet-toothed1615
sugary1664
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) iii. i. 320 She hath a sweet mouth. View more context for this quotation
8.
a. Dearly loved or prized, precious; beloved, dear.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > loved one > [adjective]
lief and deara900
dearOE
sweetOE
lovedOE
dearlyOE
liefOE
dearworth?c1225
chere1297
lovered1340
beloveda1375
dearworthyc1374
chary?a1400
sugaredc1475
tender1485
chereful1486
affectionatea1513
dilect1521
chare1583
ingling1595
darling1596
affected1600
in the love of1631
jewel-darling1643
adorable1653
fonded1684
endeared1841
dotey1852
OE Cynewulf Juliana 94 Ðu eart dohtor min seo dyreste ond seo sweteste in sefan minum.
c1275 Passion our Lord 64 in Old Eng. Misc. 39 Vor vuele he dude god, Þer-vore hi at þen ende schedden his swete blod.
c1375 Lay Folks Mass Bk. (MS. B.) 449 Swete ihesu make me saue.
c1385 G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Dido. 1042 Whom schulde he louyn but this lady swete?
c1386 G. Chaucer Prol. to Melibeus ⁋18 By goddes sweete pyne.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 14401 God luued þe Iuus lang beforn þat his suet [Fairf. squete, Gött. suete, Trin. Cambr. swete] sun was born.
c1425 Seven Sag. (P.) 2080 Thou wylt by schent, by swyte Jhesus.
c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) ii. 3 I..render grace..to god my swet creatore.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 11381 All sweire þai, full swiftly, vpon swete haloues.
1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 20v Hee wyll bee..readie to offer himselfe a sacrifice for your sweet sake.
1583 H. Howard Defensatiue sig. Ppivv Policarpus, the sweete Martir of our Lorde.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) ii. vi. 30 Ayming at Siluia as a sweeter friend. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 1 (1623) iv. vi. 55 Thy Life to me is sweet . View more context for this quotation
1780 F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (2003) IV. 129 Ah how different & how superior our sweet Father!
b. In forms of address, frequently affectionate, but formerly also (now archaic) respectful or complimentary.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > [adjective]
sweeta1225
ownc1300
deara1325
littlec1405
whitec1460
bonny1540
honeya1556
nitty1598
honey-sweeta1616
old1644
dearie1691
ou1838
diddy1963
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > courteous forms of address or title > [adjective]
goodeOE
liefc897
sweeta1225
beauc1300
gentlec1330
comelya1375
faira1375
reverentc1410
reverend1422
virtuous?1473
singular1485
lucky1568
respectable1749
a1225 Leg. Kath. 1536 Mi swete lif, se swoteliche he smecheð me..þet al me þuncheð..þet he sent me.
c1330 Spec. Gy de Warw. 555 Swete lord, forȝiue þu me.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 4579 Swete sire,..wharfore was al þis fare formest bi-gunne?
1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear v. 45 O let me not be mad sweet heauen. View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 (1623) ii. v. 137 Nay take me with thee, good sweet Exeter. View more context for this quotation
1617 R. Fenton Treat. Church Rome 145 Sweet Jesus, had it not beene for these and these, we had neuer beene enabled to preach thy Gospell.
1693 Humours & Conversat. Town 31 Ah sweet Mr. Jovial, you mistake me quite.
1782 W. Cowper Parrot iiiSweet Poll!’ his doting mistress cries, ‘Sweet Poll!’ the mimic bird replies.
1807 ‘P. Plymley’ Two Lett. on Catholics i. 6 In the first place, my sweet Abraham, the Pope is not yet landed.
1852 F. W. Faber Jesus & Mary (ed. 2) 184 Sweet Saviour! bless us ere we go.
1871 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues I. 23 Be of good cheer, sweet sir, and give your opinion.
c. absol. in affectionate address: Beloved, dear one; also in superlative. (Cf. sweet n. 4.)
ΚΠ
c1300 K. Horn (Harl.) 465 Help me þat ych were Ydobbed to be knyhte, Suete, bi al þi myhte.
a1400 Sir Beues (A.) 279 ‘Haue’, a seide, ‘ber þis sonde Me leue swet!’
a1400–50 Wars Alex. 2826 Here send I þe, my swete, salutis & ioy.
c1405 (c1395) G. Chaucer Franklin's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 270 Haue mercy swete or ye wol do me deye.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost v. ii. 373 Gentle sweete, Your wits makes wise thinges foolish. View more context for this quotation
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream iii. ii. 248 Sweete, doe not scorne her so. View more context for this quotation
a1658 R. Lovelace Lucasta: Posthume Poems (1659) 3 Tell me not (Sweet) I am unkinde.
1814 P. B. Shelley To M. W. Godwin v We are not happy, sweet!
1819 P. B. Shelley Rosalind & Helen 7 Thou lead, my sweet, And I will follow.
1885 ‘Mrs. Alexander’ At Bay x. 157 I would give my life to buy peace for you, sweetest.
d. Dear to the person himself; usually sarcastically, ‘pet’, ‘precious’: chiefly qualifying self or will. at one's own sweet will: just as one likes. Also in phrases to bet one's sweet life, to take one's own sweet time, to go one's own sweet way, and variants.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > individual character or quality > [adjective] > relating to self > belonging to oneself, itself, etc. > dear to the person himself
sweet1659
the mind > will > wish or inclination > [adverb]
to one's willOE
by one's willOE
self-willesOE
after a person's willOE
a-willc1275
at willc1300
at one's (own) liberty1426
ad placituma1556
at pleasure1579
ad libitum1606
arbitrarilya1626
arbitrariously1653
discretionally1655
ad arbitrium1663
voluntarily1676
discretionarily1681
antecedently1682
discretionary?1707
ad lib1791
at one's own sweet will1802
at choice1817
at no allowance1858
1659 J. Rushworth Hist. Coll. 49 Let us not so far wrong the Jesuites, as to rob them of their sweet Positions and practice in that very point.
1746 P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Satires ii. v. 61 Bid him go home, of his sweet self take care.
a1774 A. Tucker Light of Nature (1834) II. 401 Nor yet need he be too secure against all damage to his own sweet person.
1802 W. Wordsworth Composed upon Westm. Bridge in Misc. Sonn. 12 The river glideth at his own sweet will.
1846 Ld. Tennyson Lit. Squabbles iii The petty fools of rhyme..Who..strain to make an inch of room For their sweet selves.
1862 J. G. Whittier Amy Wentworth 151 Love has never known a law Beyond its own sweet will.
1873 J. A. Symonds Stud. Greek Poets xi. 344 The monk Planudes..remodelled the Greek Anthology of Cephalas at his own sweet will.
1889 R. Kipling From Sea to Sea II. xxxii. 110 The younger ones [sc. Mormons]..will mix with the Gentile..and you bet your sweet life there's a holy influence working toward conversion in the kiss of an average Gentile.
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §54/3 Not hurry..take one's (own) sweet time.
1945 A. Kober Parm Me 85 You betcha sweet life I'll give you a buzz.
1946 Civil & Mil. Gaz. (Lahore) 19 July 6/4 The station authorities..took their own sweet time in handing the driver the token for him to proceed on his journey.
a1966 M. Allingham Cargo of Eagles (1968) iv. 52 I let him pass, making sure he'd turn off, but not on your sweet life. He was right with me all the way.
1970 ‘D. Halliday’ Dolly & Cookie Bird vii. 105 You go your own sweet way, or so the evidence tells me.
1975 D. Delman One Man's Murder ii. 49 So you're finally here... You took your own sweet time about it.
1976 H. MacInnes Agent in Place xi. 120 Katie has complicated everything in her own sweet way.
1978 ‘G. Vaughan’ Belgrade Drop v. 33 If one single person's seen you get on this lorry..you can bet your sweet life they'll turn it inside out.
9. Having pleasant disposition and manners; amiable, kindly; gracious, benignant.
a. Of persons, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > [adjective] > agreeable in manner
sweetc825
soota1250
coutha1375
pleasantc1387
gallant?a1513
plausible1577
plausive1595
placentiousa1661
winsome1677
genial1746
clever1758
nice1830
decent1902
c825 Vesp. Ps. xxiv. 8 Dulcis et rectus Dominus, swoete & reht dryten.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 1258 Cullfre iss milde. & meoc. & swet.
c1275 Moral Ode 381 in Old Eng. Misc. 71 God is so swete & so muchel in his godnesse.
1297 R. Gloucester's Chron. (Rolls) 4088 Ou iesu þat þulke day worþ me suete & god.
1382 J. Wyclif Psalms xcix. [c.] 5 Preise ȝee his name, for swete is the Lord.
1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) i. 390 Quhen he wes blyth he wes lufly And meyk and sweyt in cumpany.
?1553 Respublica (1952) i. i. 4 I doubte not a shewete Ladye I shall fynde hir.
c1610–15 tr. Gregory of Nazianzus Life St. Nonna in C. Horstmann Lives Women Saints (1886) 176 She was a verie courteous and sweete woman.
1695 J. Edwards Disc. conc. Old & New-Test. III. xi. 350 Very Good-natur'd, Sweet, and Benign Persons.
1799 W. Wordsworth Lucy Gray ii The sweetest thing that ever grew Beside a human door!
1859 Ld. Tennyson Enid in Idylls of King 21 Seeing her [sc. Enid] so sweet and serviceable.
1905 E. Glyn Vicissitudes Evangeline 157 At luncheon she was sweet to me at once.
ironical.1608 R. Armin Nest of Ninnies sig. D2 His report..making no bones of the sweet youth gaue his doings thus.1644 W. Prynne & C. Walker True Relation Prosecution N. Fiennes 26 (note) Was not this a sweet Governour, that professeth he had no more charge of his chiefest Fort, then of any house in the Towne?
b. Of personal actions or attributes.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > courtesy > [adjective]
metheOE
hendc1225
debonairc1230
hendya1250
courteousc1275
hendlyc1275
bonairc1300
quaintc1300
sweetc1330
graciousa1375
meetha1400
debonary1402
debonariousc1485
humanec1500
civil1565
genty1660
discreet1739
polite1751
politeful1832
the world > action or operation > behaviour > good behaviour > kindness > [adjective]
mildeOE
blitheOE
goodOE
well-willingOE
beina1200
goodfulc1275
blithefula1300
faira1300
benignc1320
gainc1330
sweetc1330
kinda1333
propicec1350
well-willeda1382
well-disposeda1393
well-hearteda1393
well-willinga1393
friendsomea1400
well-willya1400
charitablec1405
well-willed1417
good-heartedc1425
kindlyc1425
honeyed1435
propitious1440
affectuousc1441
willya1449
homelyc1450
benevolous1470
benigned1470
benevolent1482
favourousc1485
well-meaned1488
well-meaning1498
humanec1500
favourablec1503
affectionatea1516
well-mindedc1522
beneficial1526
propiciant1531
benignate1533
well-intendeda1535
beneficious1535
kind-hearted1535
well-given1535
affectioned1539
well-wishing1548
figgy?1549
good-meaning1549
affectedc1553
affectionated1561
well-natured1561
well-affected?1563
officious1565
well-inclined1569
good-natured1582
partial1587
graceful?1593
well-intentioned1598
beneficent1616
candid1633
kindlike1637
benefic1641
kindly-hearted1762
well-meant1765
benignanta1782
sweet-hearted1850
c1330 Speculum Guy 998 Þo seide anon þe profete To þe widewe wordes swete.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 20086 He þat nam of hir his flexs, Als his suet will al wess.
c1400 Laud Troy Bk. 18657 God..graunte vs of his swete grace Ther-In to haue a swete place!
1473 in C. Rogers Rental Bk. Cupar-Angus (1879) I. 177 The ourman quhilk the Abbot assignis for kepyn of gud and suet nichtburhed.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. i. sig. Fiiiv To see his sweete looks, and here her swete wurds.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) ii. ii. 114 I, I. Antipholus, looke strange and frowne, Some other Mistresse hath thy sweet aspects. View more context for this quotation
1647 R. Herrick Almes in Noble Numbers 22 Give, if thou canst, an Almes; if not, afford, Instead of that, a sweet and gentle word.
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Westmorl. 140 One of a sweet nature, comely presence, courteous carriage.
1705 G. Stanhope Paraphr. Epist. & Gospels II. 265 His Temper and Conversation is sweet and obliging.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. viii. 321 His person was pleasing, his temper singularly sweet.
1886 ‘Ouida’ House Party (1887) v. 92 How are your children? Do they still care for me? That is very sweet of them.
c. Gentle, easy. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > lack of strictness > [adjective] > lenient
mildeOE
eði modesa1325
easyc1325
sweet1607
lenitive1620
lenient1787
go-easy1901
1607 G. Markham Cavelarice ii. 50 A smoothe Cannon..is of all byts the sweetest.
1607 G. Markham Cavelarice iv. 38 You shal..carrie an euen and sweet hand vpon him.
1622 T. Scott Belgicke Pismire 37 To know the natures of all people, and to be able to carry a sweet hand, wherewith to manage them easily.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. ix. 196 That he was made a Cardinall of purpose to be sent then into England for the sweet managing of those Affairs.
d. to keep (someone) sweet: to keep (someone) well-disposed towards oneself, esp. by complaisance or bribery.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > illegal payment or exaction > [verb (transitive)] > bribe
meedOE
underorna1325
corrump1387
forbuy1393
hirec1400
wage1461
fee1487
under-arearc1503
bribe1528
grease1528
money1528
corrupt1548
budc1565
to feed with money1567
to put out a person's eyes with (a gift, bribe, etc.)1580
sweeten1594
to grease the fist or (one) in the fist1598
over-bribe1619
to buy off1629
palter1641
to take off1646
buy1652
overmoneya1661
bub1684
to speak to ——1687
to tickle in the palm1694
daub1699
overbuy1710
touch1752
palm1767
to get at ——1780
fix1790
subsidize1793
sop1837
to buy over1848
backsheesh1850
nobble1856
square1859
hippodrome1866
see1867
boodleize1883
boodle1886
to get to ——1901
reach1906
straighten1923
lubricate1928
to keep (someone) sweet1939
sling1939
to pay off1942
bung1950
1939 C. Day Lewis Child of Misfortune ii. vi. 241 It was necessary to keep the wealthier parishioners sweet.
1944 ‘N. Shute’ Pastoral viii. 202 Mine won't worry, but I'd like to keep them sweet.
1965 N. Gulbenkian Pantaraxia xi. 228 Mr. Sheets..had what he described as ‘a wonderful idea’ to keep the Russians sweet politically.
1972 G. Bromley In Absence of Body vi. 69 Joe Retford..helps to keep him sweet—wines him and dines him and all that.
1978 N. Freeling Night Lords iii. 17 The cops were capable of leaking the most dreadful nonsense if one didn't take pains to keep them sweet.
10. to be sweet on (upon):
a. To behave affectionately or gallantly towards, treat caressingly.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > affection > [verb (transitive)] > treat or behave affectionately
to make much (also little, nothing, too much, etc.) of (or on)c1395
to make of (also on)1601
much1640
endear1683
to be sweet on (upon)1694
to be all over (a person)1912
1694 L. Echard in tr. Plautus Comedies Pref. sig. a 7 This Stripling began to be sweet upon her, and waggish upon me too.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew To be Sweet upon, to coakse, wheedle, entice or allure.
1716 J. Addison Freeholder No. 44. ⁋5 What still gave him greater offence, was a drunken bishop, who reeled from one side of the court to the other, and was very sweet upon an Indian queen.
1754 Connoisseur No. 7. ⁋11 I would recommend it to all married people, but especially to the ladies, not to be so sweet upon their dears before company.
b. To have a particular fondness or affection for (one of the opposite sex); to be enamoured of or smitten with. Also transferred.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > be in love or infatuated with [verb (transitive)]
loveOE
paramoura1500
to love with1597
to be sweet on (upon)1740
to be cracked about or on1874
to be stuck on1878
mash1881
to be shook on1888
to go dingy on1904
to fall for ——1906
lurve1908
to have or get a crush on1913
to be soppy on1918
to have a pash for (or on)1922
to have a case on1928
to be queer for1941
1740 tr. C. de F. de Mouhy Fortunate Country Maid I. 40 [He] is very sweet upon her; but I shall watch him so narrowly, that he'll not find an Opportunity of speaking to her, but when I am by.
1843 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) xi. 143 I think he is sweet upon your daughter.
1853 ‘C. Bede’ Adventures Mr. Verdant Green xii. 113 The bar was presided over by a young lady, ‘on whom’ he said ‘he was desperately sweet.’
1862 G. J. Whyte-Melville Inside Bar (ed. 12) iii. 256 If he should see any gentleman rather sweet upon the nag.
11. Australian slang. Fine, in order, ready.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > quality of being satisfactory > [adjective]
wellOE
sufferablea1340
worthy1340
sufficient1489
paregala1500
competent1535
something like?1556
right1567
sweet1577
fairish1611
all right1652
fair1656
comfortable1658
decent1711
respectable1750
unrepulsive1787
decentisha1814
fair-to-middling1822
fine1828
christena1838
OK1839
tidy1844
not (or none) so dusty?1856
sweet1898
oke1928
okey-doke1934
okey-dokey1936
tickety-boo1939
cool1951
aight1993
1898 Bulletin (Sydney) 17 Dec. (Red Page) Sweet, roujig and not too stinkin' are good.
1939 K. Tennant Foveaux 312 ‘I brassed a mug yesterday,’ he told her, ‘and everything's sweet again.’ He flashed a roll of notes.
1949 L. Glassop Lucky Palmer 242 ‘Everything jake?’ he asked. ‘She's sweet,’ said Max.
1962 S. Gore Down Golden Mile 120 Might as well be in it. We'll be sweet for getting back.
1975 X. Herbert Poor Fellow my Country 353 Mossie came in..to say cheerfully, ‘She's sweet.’
B. adv. Sweetly; so as to be sweet (literal or figurative).
1. = sweetly adv. 1 (Chiefly with verb smell.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [adverb]
sweeta1325
sweetly1530
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [adverb]
sootc1000
spice-likea1325
sweeta1325
softa1400
fragrantly?1521
sweetlya1547
odoriferously1601
nectarel1648
aromatically1657
ambrosially1826
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 2443 [I]osep dede hise lich..riche-like smeren, And spice-like swete smaken.
c1390 (a1376) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Vernon) (1867) A. vii. 206 Þei schule soupe þe swettore whon þei han hit deseruet.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 1014 Floures þat ful swete smelles.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. i. 86 Whats in a name? That which we call a Rose, By any other name would smell as sweet . View more context for this quotation
c1640 J. Shirley Contention Ajax & Ulisses (1659) 128 Onely the actions of the just Smell sweet, and blossom in their dust.
1668 J. Flavell Saint Indeed 28 When the salt of heavenly mindedness is again cast into the Spring, the streams will run clearer and sweeter.
1746 P. Francis tr. Horace in P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Epistles i. xix. 6 Soon the tuneful Nine At Morning breath'd, and not too sweet, of Wine.
2. = sweetly adv. 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > [adverb] > melodious or harmonious
sweetly1340
melodiouslya1449
sweet1568
soot1579
tunably1586
harmonically1589
consort1590
harmoniously1611
tunefully1656
symphoniously1757
nightingaly1870
1568 Christis Kirk on Grene in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1928) II. 263 He playit so schill and sang so sweit.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. i. 210 How siluer sweet sound louers tongues in night. View more context for this quotation
a1708 T. Ward England's Reformation (1710) i. 96 She Psalms wou'd often sing in Meeter Like Hopkins, but a great deal Sweeter.
1851 Ld. Tennyson Edwin Morris 113 Then low and sweet I whistled thrice.
1891 F. W. Farrar Darkness & Dawn I. xxii. 207 ‘I think,' said Nero, savagely, ‘that swans sing sweetest before they die.’
3.
a. = sweetly adv. 4.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > pleasing appearance > [adverb]
fairlyOE
comelyOE
hendly?c1225
goodlyc1275
seemlya1325
sweet1338
quaintly1340
properlyc1390
well?a1400
comelilyc1400
seemlilyc1400
jollilyc1426
formally1548
handsomely1560
sightly1592
handsome1600
winsomely17..
nicely1714
in one's best (also worst) looks1816
presentably1848
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > aesthetic quality or good taste > [adverb] > pleasing to the aesthetic sense
sweet1338
prettilyc1450
sweetly1576
pretty1617
1338 R. Mannyng Chron. (1810) 275 Doun Sir Richard went, & spak to þam lufly, Many of þam he knewe, so fair spak & so suete.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 15186 Þe lauerd..ansuard þam ful suete.
c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Miller's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 119 He kiste hir sweete.
a1529 J. Skelton Magnyfycence (?1530) sig. Fi So I wolde clepe her so I wolde kys her swete.
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. 517 Beseikand thame richt sweit to cum him to.
1599 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. ii. 32 Goodmorrow father. Fri. Benedicitie. What early tongue so sweete saluteth me?
b. = sweetly adv. 4d.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > easiness > [adverb] > without hindrance or encumberment
freelyeOE
wellOE
freec1250
glidderly13..
without (also but) lettingc1330
oliver current1466
smootha1500
pronewise1585
currently1586
glib1594
glibly1607
clearly1612
swimminglya1640
smoothly1668
uninterrupted1677
unobstructedly1788
smack-smooth1802
sweetly1825
sweet1846
unimpededly1846
hitchlessly1910
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > [adverb] > and pleasing
comelyOE
winlyc1000
comelilyc1400
trimly?a1513
trima1547
sweetly1594
cleverly1697
nicely1714
tidy1824
sweet1846
wally1847
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > types of machine generally > [adverb] > working smoothly or easily
sweetly1825
sweet1846
1846 C. Holtzapffel Turning & Mech. Manip. II. 689 The generality of other saw-files are single or float-cut, that kind of file tooth being considered to ‘cut sweeter’.
1862 J. Pycroft Cricket Tutor 26 There is one way..to make the ball fly away like a shot, going so clean off the bat that you scarcely feel it; and this is the test of clean hitting—of the ball going off ‘sweet’.
4. = sweetly adv. 3.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > [adverb]
sweetlyc900
queemlyOE
lustly971
winlyc1000
sootlya1125
to (a person's) queemc1175
lustilya1225
avenantlya1375
pleasinglya1398
queema1400
beinc1400
farrandlyc1400
pleasantlyc1400
pleasantlya1425
queemfullyc1425
thankfullyc1480
greablyc1500
dulcely1508
dulcea1525
pleasant1553
agreeably?1567
pleasurably1580
sugarly1587
flattering1597
sweet1597
attractively1640
well-pleasingly1645
welcomely1646
flatteringly1661
relishingly1677
satisfyingly1743
sweetsome1799
smilingly1806
dulcetly1810
gratifyingly1822
honeyedly1832
enjoyably1877
suavely1883
congenially1884
a fair treat1884
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > pleasantness of sound > [adverb]
sweetly1340
sweet1597
euphoniously1836
euphonically1884
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet ii. i. 232 Sleepe dwell vpon thine eyes, peace on thy breast. I would that I were sleep and peace of sweet to rest. View more context for this quotation
1600 W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice v. i. 54 How sweet the moone-light sleepes vpon this banke. View more context for this quotation
1757 T. Gray Ode II iii. ii, in Odes 19 Her lyon-port, her awe-commanding face, Attemper'd sweet to virgin-grace.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab vi. 76 The stars, Which on thy cradle beamed so brightly sweet.

Compounds

Combinations and special collocations.
C1. of the adjective.
a. With nouns: See also sweetmeat n., sweet singer n., sweet-water n.
sweetback n. U.S. slang a woman's lover, a ladies' man; a pimp; also sweetback man (cf. sweet man n. below).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > a lover > [noun] > male lover
servantc1405
specialc1425
servitorc1450
love-lad1586
young man1589
inamorato1592
swainc1592
gentleman friend1667
enamorado1677
spark1707
beau?1720
Johnny1726
man friend1736
feller1842
novio1843
soupirant1849
fella1874
man1874
fellow1878
square-pusher1890
stud1895
papa1896
lover mana1905
boyfriend1906
daddy1912
lover-boy1925
sheikh1925
sweetback1929
sweet man1942
older man1951
boyf1990
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > pimping or procuring > procurer of either sex > pimp
putourc1390
panderc1450
mitchera1500
apple-squire?1536
squire of dames or ladies1590
apron-squire1593
bed-broker1594
pimp1600
pippin squire1600
petticoat-monger1605
smockster1608
underputter1608
broker-between1609
squire of the placket1611
squire1612
fleshmongera1616
cock bawd1632
whiskin1632
pimp-whiskin1638
bully1675
foot pimp1690
mutton-broker1694
pimp whisk1707
flash-man1789
panderer1826
bludger1856
whoremaster1864
mack1894
lover1904
jelly bean1905
procureur1910
P.I.1928
sweetback1929
sweet man1942
nookie-bookie1943
papasan1970
1929 in P. Oliver Screening Blues (1968) vi. 206 Had a man, good old sweetback.
1935 A. J. Pollock Underworld Speaks 117/2 Sweet back, a pimp.
1950 R. P. Blesh & H. Janis They all played Ragtime ii. 39 The dapper, foppish ‘macks’ or ‘sweet-back men’..got their gambling stakes from the girls.
1974 Black World Sept. 25/2 Long Black Song tells us, here in the 1970's, that the days of darky entertainers, superflies, sweetbacks, and Melindas, if not over, are numbered.
sweet-bag n. Obsolete a small bag or sachet filled with a scented or aromatic substance, used for perfuming the air, clothes, etc.; occasionally transferred of the honey-bag of a bee.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > perfume making > [noun] > container
musk ball1423
puff1436
casting-glass1544
perfuming pan1558
perfumer1591
pouncet-box1598
perfumier1601
sweet-bag1615
casting-bottle1638
perfuming pota1650
musk bag1687
smelling-bottle1722
scent-bottle1765
scent box1777
vinaigrette1811
scent jar1813
scent bag1816
scent ball1832
pouncet1843
scent casket1845
pot-pourri jar1848
cassolette1851
scent sachet1856
scent spray1858
lavender drawer1863
lavender bag1865
odorator1890
pot-pourri bowl1904
lavender sachet1938
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Hymenoptera > [noun] > suborder Apocrita, Petiolata, or Heterophaga > group Aculeata (stinging) > superfamily Apoidea (bees) > honey-bag
honey bag1600
bottle1609
sweet-bag1615
1615 in W. Foster Lett. received by E. India Co. (1899) III. 16 Some pillow sweetbag or other like thing of the rockwork used lately in England.
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §385 When Bodies are Moved or Stirred, though not Broken, they Smell more; As a Sweet-Bagge waved.
1648 R. Herrick Hesperides sig. C8 About the sweet bag of a Bee, Two Cupids fell at odds [printed ddos].
1707 C. Cibber Double Gallant (ed. 2) i. 5 Her Sweetbags instead of..Musk and Amber, breath nothing but..Hartshorn, Rue, and Assafœtida.
1821 W. Scott Kenilworth II. viii. 203 Hast thou no perfumes and sweet bags, or any handsome casting bottles of the newest mode?
sweet-ball n. Obsolete a ball of scented or aromatic substance.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fragrance > [noun] > fragrant substance or perfume
pimentc1300
odoramentc1384
savouringc1384
odoura1425
aromatica1513
smella1533
fume1541
perfume1542
sweet-water?1543
scent1596
pomander1600
sweets1603
bisse1608
sweet-ball1617
plash1649
suffition1656
essence1661
odoratea1682
otto1822
aroma1830
nosegay1855
foo-foo1880
1617 Janua Linguarum 76 The Queene with her courtiers that weare feathers, smell of sweete-balls.
1637 T. Heywood Pleasant Dial. ii, in Wks. (1874) VI. 130 This sweet-Ball, Take it to cheare your heart.
1650 tr. J. A. Comenius Janua Linguarum Reserata §587 Sweet-powders, sweet balls, and besprinklings out of sweet-glass bottles.
sweet band n. originally and chiefly U.S. a band which plays sweet music.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > instrumentalist > company of instrumentalists > [noun] > band > type of
waits1298
consort1587
wait player1610
wind music1650
the fiddles1676
military band1775
German band1819
street band1826
brass band1834
promenade band1836
horn-band1849
pipe band1867
wind-band1876
Hungarian band1882
jazz band1916
jazz orchestra1916
big band1919
road band1922
Schrammel quartet1924
showband1926
spasm band1926
dance-band1927
marching band1930
name band1932
ork1933
silver band1933
sweet band1935
Schrammel orchestra1938
pop band1942
jug band1946
steel band1949
rehearsal band1957
skiffle band1957
ghost band1962
support band1969
support group1969
scratch band1982
1935 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Nov. 71/2 Hot musicians look down on sweet bands, which faithfully follow the composer's arrangements.
1938 Sat. Evening Post 7 May 23/1 Art Hickman and the first wave of big sweet bands [were] calling the country's dance tunes.
1974 Listener 24 Oct. 532/1 Would Albert McCarthy..say that Glenn Miller's was the best dance/swing/‘sweet’ band?
sweet biscuit n. a biscuit flavoured with sugar.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > biscuit > [noun] > other biscuits
dorcake14..
cracknelc1440
hard breada1500
crackling1598
Naples biscuit1650
gingerbread man1686
chocolate biscuit1702
biscotin1723
sponge biscuit1736
maple biscuita1753
butter biscuit1758
nut1775
Oliver biscuit1786
funeral biscuit1790
rock biscuit?1790
ratafia1801
finger biscuit1812
Savoy drop1816
lady's finger1818
snap1819
Abernethy1830
pretzel1831
wine-biscuit1834
gingersnap1838
captain's biscuit1843
lebkuchen1847
simnel1854
sugar cookie1854
peppernut1862
McClellan pie1863
Savoy ring1866
Brown George1867
beaten biscuit1876
digestive1876
Osborne1876
Bath Oliver1878
marie1878
boer biscuit1882
charcoal biscuit1885
biscotti1886
fairing1888
snickerdoodle1889
pfeffernuss1891
zwieback1894
Nice1895
Garibaldi biscuit1896
Oswegoc1900
squashed fly1900
amaretto1905
boerebeskuit1905
Romary1905
petit beurre1906
Oswego biscuit1907
soetkoekie1910
Oreo1912
custard cream1916
Anzac1923
sweet biscuit1929
langue de chat1931
Bourbon biscuit1932
Afghan1934
flapjack1935
Florentine1936
chocolate chip cookie1938
choc chip cookie1940
Toll House cookie1940
tuile1943
pizzelle1949
black and white1967
Romany Cream1970
papri1978
1926–7 Army & Navy Stores Catal. 6/2 Assorted biscuits. A choice selection of Plain, Sweet, and Fancy kinds.]
1929 W. Faulkner Sartoris 168 Negroes lounged, skinning bananas or small florid cartons of sweet biscuits.
1941 Ration Craft 9 The present shortage of sweet biscuits is well known.
1977 Lancashire Life Feb. 19/1 Sweet biscuits were unknown until about sixty years ago. Before that the only biscuits made were ship's biscuits.
sweet-blanch n. Obsolete a dish made with the flesh of chickens and almond milk.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > fowl dishes > [noun]
blancmange1377
bouce Janec1420
sweet-blanchc1430
dumpoke1698
temperade1699
biberot1706
howtowdie1728
alderman?1782
suprême de volaille1822
chicken fixings1837
paprikahendl1839
poule au pot1849
Marengo1861
paprikahuhn1870
Peking duck1874
poule au riz1882
Maryland chicken1888
chicken finger1900
arroz con pollo1901
moo goo gai pan1902
chicken à la King1905
coq au vin1915
chicken burger1933
supreme of chicken1939
cassoulet1940
chicken rice1950
piccata1963
chicken tender1969
turducken1982
Kiev1993
chimaek2012
c1430 Two Cookery-bks. 112 Sweteblanche.—Nym chikons or hennes, skald hem..& seth hem with good beofe.
sweet-bone n. (also sweet-bones) dialect ‘a griskin of pork’ (Miss Baker Northampt. Gloss. 1854).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > animals for food > pork > [noun] > cuts or parts
pig's footc1475
hog's foot1561
hog's cheek1573
bald-rib1598
spring1598
list1623
griskin1699
chine1712
pork griskin1725
rearing1736
pork chop?1752
hand1794
faggot1815
hog round1819
sweet-bone1826
butt1845
pig trotter1851
pork belly1863
Hodge1879
fore-end1906
fore-hock1923
1826 H. More in W. Roberts Mem. (1835) IV. 304 The spare-rib, sweet-bone, ears, and snout [of a pig].
1969 C. Drummond Odds on Death vii. 130 Sister has some Wiltshire sweetbones done under crisp suet crust.
sweet-cake n. a kind of cake made with a specially large proportion of sugar.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > cake > [noun] > a cake > other cakes
honey appleeOE
barley-cake1393
seed cakea1400
cake?a1425
pudding-cake?1553
manchet1562
biscuit cake1593
placent1598
poplin1600
jumbal1615
bread pudding1623
semel1643
wine-cakea1661
Shrewsbury cake1670
curd cake1675
fruitcake1687
clap-bread1691
simnel cake1699
orange-flower cake1718
banana cake1726
sweet-cake1726
torte1748
Naples cake1766
Bath cake1769
gofer1769
yeast-cake1795
nutcake1801
tipsy-cake1806
cruller1808
baba1813
lady's finger1818
coconut cake1824
mint cake1825
sices1825
cup-cake1828
batter-cake1830
buckwheat1830
Dundee seed cake1833
fat-cake1839
babka1846
wonder1848
popover1850
cream-cake1855
sly-cake1855
dripping-cake1857
lard-cake1858
puffet1860
quick cake1865
barnbrack1867
matrimony cake1871
brioche1873
Nelson cake1877
cocoa cake1883
sesame cake1883
marinade1888
mystery1889
oblietjie1890
stuffed monkey1892
Greek bread1893
Battenberg1903
Oswego cake1907
nusstorte1911
dump cake1912
Dobos Torte1915
lekach1918
buckle1935
Florentine1936
hash cake1967
space cake1984
1726 J. Swift Gulliver I. ii. iii. 65 I..sat down..to eat a piece of Sweet Cake for my Breakfast.
1825 T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. I. 198 The fruits, sugars, wines, creams, and sweet-cakes [after dinner].
a1881 M. Clarke in Mem. (1884) 143 He..got a big piece of sweet-cake, and put it in the pocket of his little jumper.
sweet-cheese n. Obsolete (see quot. 1688).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dairy produce > [noun] > milk > curds
curd1378
slipc1425
wrench-milk1510
well curds1538
float-wheyc1550
ricoct1582
curdlea1591
bonny clabber1605
fleeting1611
clabber1634
yearned milk?1635
trouts1683
sweet-cheese1688
earning1744
slip curd1784
1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory ii. 173/1 Sweet-Cheese, Fleeting strained through a fine Cloth and Sugared.
sweet dreams int. a farewell to someone going to bed.
ΚΠ
1908 Sears, Roebuck Catal. 198/1 Tenor Solos..Good Bye, Sweet Dreams, Good Bye.
1970 New Yorker 28 Feb. 70/2 Good night, sleep tight, sweet dreams.
1981 P. Niesewand Word of Gentleman xvii. 109 ‘I need some sleep.’.. ‘Sweet dreams, then.’
sweet Jesus int. used as an oath or exclamation (cf. Jesus n., int., and adj. Phrases 1c).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [interjection] > religious oaths (referring to God) > referring to Jesus
for Christ's sake (or sakes)eOE
in (also a, o', on) Christ's nameeOE
by Christ's, or His, woundsc1350
Christ's foot!c1450
by Gis1528
Jesus Christ1602
Christ1748
Christ almighty1810
jabbers1821
for Chrissakes1845
Jeez1896
jeepers1929
sweet Jesus1932
Jeezum1959
1932 W. Faulkner Light in August viii. 182 ‘Come on out,’ the blonde woman said. ‘For sweet Jesus,’ Max said.
1955 F. O' Connor Wise Blood v. 95 Oh sweet Jesus, come on!
1973 ‘D. Jordan’ Nile Green xxxiii. 157 Her voice so still, so soft, and I believed her, sweet Jesus, I believed her.
sweet life n. = dolce vita n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > sensuous pleasure > luxury or luxurious living > [noun]
softnessOE
voluptuositya1380
voluptuoustya1382
delicacya1393
deliciousnessa1500
volupteousness1526
niceness1540
nicety1542
wealiness1545
luxe1558
voluptibility1631
luxury1633
voluptuousness1652
volupté1712
decadence1882
gracious living1892
vie de luxe1920
good life1937
dolce vita1961
sweet life1962
1962 Sunday Express 18 Feb. 13/5 Klaus was tired of being respectable and hungered for ‘the sweet life’.
1974 M. Cecil Heroines in Love ix. 218 The sweet life was turning sour on heroines in the late 1960s.
sweet-lifer n. one who leads the sweet life.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > sensuous pleasure > luxury or luxurious living > [noun] > one who lives luxuriously
delicatea1382
high-liver1715
feather-bedder1952
sweet-lifer1967
1967 D. Skirrow I was following this Girl iii. 16 I've been tailing that toffee-nosed sweet-lifer.
sweet-love n. Obsolete a term of affection for a beloved person.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > [noun]
darlingc888
belamy?c1225
culver?c1225
dearc1230
sweetheartc1290
heartc1300
sweetc1330
honeya1375
dovec1386
jewelc1400
birdc1405
cinnamonc1405
honeycombc1405
lovec1405
wantonc1450
mulling?a1475
daisyc1485
crowdy-mowdy?a1513
honeysop?a1513
powsowdie?a1513
suckler?a1513
foolc1525
buttinga1529
whitinga1529
beautiful1534
turtle-dove1535
soula1538
heartikin1540
bully?1548
turtle1548
lamba1556
nyletc1557
sweet-lovea1560
coz1563
ding-ding1564
pugs1566
golpol1568
sparling1570
lover1573
pug1580
bulkin1582
mopsy1582
chuck1589
bonny1594
chick1594
sweetikin1596
ladybird1597
angel1598
muss1598
pinkany1599
sweetkin1599
duck1600
joy1600
sparrowc1600
sucket1605
nutting1606
chuckaby1607
tickling1607
bagpudding1608
heartling1608
chucking1609
dainty1611
flittermouse1612
honeysuckle1613
fubs1614
bawcocka1616
pretty1616
old thinga1625
bun1627
duckling1630
bulchin1633
bulch?c1640
sweetling1648
friscoa1652
ding-dongs1662
buntinga1668
cocky1680
dearie1681
chucky1683
lovey1684
machree1689
nykin1693
pinkaninny1696
nug1699
hinny1724
puss1753
pet1767
dovey1769
sweetie1778
lovey-dovey1781
lovely1791
ducky1819
toy1822
acushla1825
alanna1825
treat1825
amigo1830
honey child1832
macushla1834
cabbage1840
honey-bunch1874
angel pie1878
m'dear1887
bach1889
honey baby1895
prawn1895
hon1896
so-and-so1897
cariad1899
pumpkin1900
honey-bun1902
pussums1912
snookums1919
treasure1920
wogger1922
amico1929
sugar1930
baby cake1949
angel cake1951
lamb-chop1962
petal1974
bae2006
a1560 T. Phaer tr. Virgil Æneid viii. Y iv O husbande sweetloue most disierd.
sweet mama n. U.S. slang (see quots.).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > a lover > [noun] > female lover > black female lover
sweet mama1950
1950 A. Lomax Mister Jelly Roll 19 Now these boys used to all have a sweet mama..they was what I would call, maybe a fifth-class whore.
1970 C. Major Dict. Afro-Amer. Slang 111 Sweet mama, black female lover.
sweet man n. U.S. slang = sweetback n. above.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > a lover > [noun] > male lover
servantc1405
specialc1425
servitorc1450
love-lad1586
young man1589
inamorato1592
swainc1592
gentleman friend1667
enamorado1677
spark1707
beau?1720
Johnny1726
man friend1736
feller1842
novio1843
soupirant1849
fella1874
man1874
fellow1878
square-pusher1890
stud1895
papa1896
lover mana1905
boyfriend1906
daddy1912
lover-boy1925
sheikh1925
sweetback1929
sweet man1942
older man1951
boyf1990
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > pimping or procuring > procurer of either sex > pimp
putourc1390
panderc1450
mitchera1500
apple-squire?1536
squire of dames or ladies1590
apron-squire1593
bed-broker1594
pimp1600
pippin squire1600
petticoat-monger1605
smockster1608
underputter1608
broker-between1609
squire of the placket1611
squire1612
fleshmongera1616
cock bawd1632
whiskin1632
pimp-whiskin1638
bully1675
foot pimp1690
mutton-broker1694
pimp whisk1707
flash-man1789
panderer1826
bludger1856
whoremaster1864
mack1894
lover1904
jelly bean1905
procureur1910
P.I.1928
sweetback1929
sweet man1942
nookie-bookie1943
papasan1970
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §443/5 Beau,..sweet man.
1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang §508/3 Pimp..sweetman.
1952 S. Selvon Brighter Sun ii. 21 Look how Ah take up meself and leave sweetman life in town.
1959 V. S. Naipaul Miguel St. xi. 118 Eddoes was a real ‘saga-boy’. This didn't mean that he wrote epic poetry. It meant that he was a ‘sweet-man’, a man of leisure, well-dressed, and keen on women.
1972 J. Maryland in T. Kochman Rappin' & Stylin' Out 211 Damn, Rev., that's some real cruel shit, suggesting a sweet man [pimp] be iced.
sweet-mart n. a name for the pine-marten, as distinguished from the foulmart, foumart n., or polecat (see mart n.5).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Mustelidae (weasel, marten, otter, or badger) > [noun] > genus Martes (marten) > martes martes (pine marten)
pine marten1772
sweet-mart1788
baum marten1879
1788 W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in Rural Econ. Yorks. II. 358 Sweet-mart, the marten.
1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II Sweet-mart, the badger. Yorksh.
1905 Athenæum 26 Aug. 262/1 Cumberland had its almost distinctive sports, such as foulmart hunting and sweetmart hunting.
sweet milk n. fresh milk having its natural sweet flavour, as distinct from skimmed milk, or from ‘sour milk’, i.e. buttermilk; also attributive, as sweet-milk cheese, cheese made from unskimmed milk.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dairy produce > [noun] > milk > buttermilk
sweet milka1475
buttermilka1500
whey of butter1530
kirn-milkc1550
lap1567
churn-milk1598
whig1688
souter's brandy1790
a1475 Liber Cocorum (Sloane) (1862) 17 Take swete mylke and put in panne.
1786 R. Burns Holy Fair vii, in Poems 44 Wi sweet-milk cheese, in monie a whang.
1820 J. Hogg Welldean Hall in Tales & Sketches (1836) II. 224 That whining sweet-milk boy.
1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm II. 713 Hard-boiled picks of porridge, with a little sweet-milk in the dish.
1877 Encycl. Brit. VII. 649/2 Edam..gives its name to a well-known description of ‘sweetmilk’ cheese.
1895 Oracle Encycl. I. 556/1 Butter-Milk, the liquid which remains after the churning of cream or sweet-milk for the preparation of butter.
sweetmouth v. slang (transitive) to flatter.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > flattery or flattering > flatter [verb (transitive)]
flatter?c1225
flackera1250
slickc1250
blandishc1305
blandc1315
glozec1330
beflatter1340
curryc1394
elkena1400
glaverc1400
anointa1425
glotherc1480
losenge1480
painta1513
to hold in halsc1560
soothe1580
smooth1584
smooth1591
soothe1601
pepper1654
palp1657
smoothify1694
butter1700
asperse1702
palaver1713
blarney1834
sawder1834
soft-soap1835
to cock up1838
soft-solder1838
soother1842
behoney1845
soap1853
beslaver1861
beslobber1868
smarm1902
sugar1923
sweetmouth1948
smooth-talk1950
1948 Publ. Amer. Dial. Soc. ix. 81 Employment [by the Gullahs] of groups of words for..verbs..or other parts of speech (such as..to sweet mouth ‘to flatter’).
1950 Language 26 330 Not recorded in the Atlas but commonly considered to be of Negro origin are such metaphors as sweet-mouth ‘to flatter’ and bad~mouth ‘to curse’.
1973 J. Jones Touch of Danger xli. 238 He went on sweetmouthing me, with his slippery mean eyes.
sweet music n. light instrumental music of a popular or conventional character (cf. A. 4b); also figurative, esp. in allusion to love-making.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > action of caressing > [noun] > sexual caressing > in allusion to love-making
sweet music1967
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > [noun] > other general types
country music1585
water musicc1660
concert music1776
eye music1812
ballet music1813
night music1832
absolute music1856
Tafelmusik1880
Ars Antiqua1886
Ars Nova1886
early music1886
tone poetry1890
mood music1922
Gebrauchsmusik1930
shake music1935
modernistic1938
industrial1942
spasm music1943
musica reservata1944
protest music1949
night music1950
palm court music1958
title music1960
bottleneck guitar1961
rinky-tink1962
Schrammel-musik1967
sweet music1967
chutney1968
roots music1969
electronica1980
multiphonics1983
chutney soca1987
chiptune1992
1967 Guardian 28 Sept. 4/5 If pop music should be a fad that passes he sees Radio One as becoming a ‘sweet music’ station.
1970 Guardian 10 Mar. 1/3 A..choice between..pop music on Radio 1 and ‘sweet’ music on Radio 2.
1971 R. Gadney Somewhere in England xxi. 180 A small black girl..offered him ‘some sweet music’.
1977 J. Wainwright Day of Peppercorn Kill 99 [They] should be making sweet music, every night of the week.
1981 H. R. F. Keating Go West, Inspector Ghote iii. 29 Rock music, country music, sweet music, pop music—all or any of these..at the touch of a button.
sweet nothings n. colloquial sentimental trivia, endearments.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > [noun] > sentimental trivia or endearments
love worda1250
sweet nothings1900
sweet talk1945
1900 Fazl-i-Husain Diary 20 May in A. Husain Fazl-i-Husain (1946) ii. 35 The sweet nothings so often talked of in the romantic descriptions.
1934 C. Lambert Music Ho! iii. 212 The blues have a certain austerity that places them far above the sweet nothings of George Gershwin.
1973 M. Amis Rachel Papers 119 Half the guests, including DeForest (after a minute of sweet-nuthins with Rachel), had wisely got the hell out as soon as dinner was over.
sweet oil n. any oil of pleasant or mild taste, spec. olive oil; rape oil.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fat or oil > [noun] > olive oil
elec950
oil1221
oil d'olive1381
oil of olives1381
oil olivec1425
Seville oil1436
salad oil1559
olive oil1566
sweet oil1581
virgin's oil1611
Minorca oil1612
virgin oil1699
Lucca oil1725
Gallipoli oil1839
virgin salad oil1839
Florence-oil1858
extra-virgin1981
EVOO1993
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > extracted or refined oil > [noun] > pleasant or sweet oil
sweet oil1581
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > extracted or refined oil > [noun] > olive oil
oil1221
oil d'olive1381
oil of olives1381
oil olivec1425
olive oil1566
sweet oil1581
1581 R. Mulcaster Positions xxxiv. 121 Then were they oynted with sweete oyle.
a1585 in Eng. Hist. Rev. (1914) XXIX. 519 All our wolle oyles and swete oyles.
1757 Bromfeild Eng. Nightshades 74 The red oil, produced by distillation from bitter almonds, after the sweet oil had been expressed.
1776 Pigou in Gentleman's Mag. (1792) Jan. 14/2 We found relief by rubbing the parts with sweet oil.
1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. III. iii. 158 If this liquid [sc. sulphethylic acid] be boiled, sweet oil of wine mingled with sulphurous acid passes over.
1867 C. L. Bloxam Chemistry 580 Salad oil, or sweet oil.., is obtained by crushing olives.
1886 Encycl. Brit. XX. 273/2 Rape oil,..known also as ‘sweet oil’, is obtained from seeds of cultivated varieties of the cruciferous genus Brassica.
sweet papa n. U.S. slang (see quot. 1970).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > love affair > [noun] > man who lavishes gifts on young woman
sweet papac1923
sugar daddy1926
c1923 in W. C. Handy's Coll. Blues (?1925) 28 Ashes in my sweet pa-pa's bed So that he can't slip out.
1941 W. C. Handy Father of Blues x. 141 The sweet papa who happened to be shining around the absentee prisoner's gal at the moment.
1970 C. Major Dict. Afro-Amer. Slang 111 Sweet papa, a sugar-daddy and sweet man.
sweet-powder n. Obsolete perfumed powder used as a cosmetic.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the skin or complexion > [noun] > preparations for the skin or complexion > powders > scented
damask powder?a1547
sweet-powder1573
diapasm1616
pulvilio1675
pulvila1685
foo-foo1880
talcum powder1901
dusting-powder1907
talcum1908
talc1938
1573–4 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 208 Sweete powder made of Musk & Amber.
1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 52. ⁋1 The Expence of Sweet Powder and Jessamine are considerably abated.
1710 C. Shadwell Fair Quaker of Deal ii. 25 He's for turning the Gun powder into Sweet-Powder, and the Iron Balls into Wash-Balls.
sweet precipitate n. mercurous chloride or calomel, Hg2Cl2.
ΚΠ
1890 Cent. Dict. at Precipitate Sweet precipitate, mercurous chlorid or calomel.
sweet-spittle n. Pathology an increased secretion of saliva having a sweetish taste.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > disordered secretion > [noun] > disordered salivation
ptyalism1676
sweet-spittle1817
1817 J. M. Good Physiol. Syst. Nosol. 13 Apocenosis, ptyalismus, mellitus..Sweet-spittle.
sweet spot n. the point on a bat, club, racket, etc., at which it makes most effective contact with the ball; cf. meat n. 12.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > [noun] > instrument for hitting ball > parts of
face1816
drive1867
meat1909
sweet spot1976
1976 National Observer (U.S.) 1 May 10/4 The sweet spot—the precise point of contact on the racket face where all the force of a swing goes into the ball without jarring the arm—was considerably farther from the center than anyone had ever suspected.
1976 Golf International 13 May 21/1 Because we use investment casting, the head weight is distributed over a wider area, increasing the sweet spot. We call this Perimeter Weighting.
1980 Esquire Mar. 78 Tennis players, of course, are accustomed to a long racquet, but they're also accustomed to a nice fluffy projectile and the luxury of a forgiving ‘sweet spot’.
sweet-stuff n. sweetmeats, sweets, confectionery; also attributive and in other combinations; now frequently in plural; †also euphemistic, gin (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > [noun]
confection1393
sweetmeat?a1500
junkery1509
conceit1525
banqueta1533
junketry1599
sweet1660
spice1674
knick-knack1682
confectionery1769
confiture1802
candy?1809
knick-knackery1813
mithai1824
dulce1834
sweet-stuff1835
bouchées1846
ket1979
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > confections or sweetmeats > sweets > [noun]
sweetmeat?a1500
candy1587
spice1674
lollipop1784
sweet-stuff1835
goody1853
sucks1858
pogey bait1918
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > distilled drink > gin > [noun]
bottled lightning1713
gin1713
royal bob1722
diddle1725
strike-fire1725
tittery1725
max1728
maxim1739
strip-me-naked1751
eye-water1755
sky blue1755
lightning1781
Jacky1800
ribbon1811
Daffy's elixir1821
sweet-stuff1835
tiger's milk1850
juniper1857
cream of the wilderness1858
satin1864
Twankay1900
panther1931
mother's ruin1933
needle and pin1937
1835 C. Dickens in Evening Chron. 7 Feb. 3/3 Wretched houses with..‘sweet-stuff’ manufacturers in the cellars.
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 204/1 The sweet-stuff maker (I never heard them called confectioners).
1862 G. A. Sala Accepted Addr. 96 The back parlour of the little sweetstuff shop.
1908 Chambers's Jrnl. Feb. 204/1 The scent for sweetstuffs is very strongly developed in the Customs officer, and he has found sugar in such an unlikely article as blacking.
1911 J. H. Hart Cacao ii. 18 The bean may be used in the same way as almonds, and boiled to sweetstuff with sugar.
1963 Times 18 May 9/4 We teach our students the harmful effects of the consumption of sweetstuffs between meals.
sweet sublimate n. now historical a supposedly sweet-tasting compound of mercury, probably consisting of calomel (mercurous chloride) and/or corrosive sublimate (mercuric chloride) with sugar of lead (lead acetate) and other impurities.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > poison > [noun] > poisonous chemicals
mercury sublimy?1540
sublimate1543
sublimatum1558
sublimy1558
mercury sublimate1562
corrosive sublimate1664
sweet sublimate1664
supplement1769
Prussian acid1783
oxalic acid1788
prussic acid1788
cyanide1815
cyanuret1827
nitrobenzide1835
nitrobenzol1848
pyridine1851
nitrobenzene1852
isonitrile1871
iso-cyanide1877
1664 P. D. C. tr. N. Le Fèvre Compend. Body Chymistry II. ii. x. 207 Then shall you have that they call Mercurius dulcis, or sweet Mercury, sweet Sublimate, the sweet and mitigated Eagle, the tamed Dragon.
1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique Sweet Sublimate is a Corrosive Sublimate, whose Points have been qualify'd by some Preparation.
1828 S. F. Gray Operative Chemist 731 Calomel. This, which is the sweet sublimate of the old chemists, has received a number of names lately, as mild muriate of quicksilver, [etc.].
1962 M. P. Crosland Hist. Stud. Lang. Chem. iii. 112 In the seventeenth century it was known that sweet sublimate and corrosive sublimate were both ‘mixt bodies’ containing mercury and an acid.
2009 J. M. Hightower Diagnosis Mercury v. 51 Mercuric chloride (HgCl2), also known as corrosive or sweet sublimate, or bichloride of mercury, was once the most commonly prescribed form of mercurial medicine and antiseptic.
sweet tooth n. (tooth n. 2a), a taste or liking for sweet things; also transferred and figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [noun] > sweet tooth
sweet tooth1390
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > [noun] > appetite for specific kind of food
sweet tooth1390
sweetnessc1440
greasy stomach1592
1390 J. Gower Confessio Amantis I. 14 Delicacie his swete toth Hath fostred.
1580 J. Lyly Euphues & his Eng. (new ed.) f. 43v I am glad that my Adonis hath a sweete tooth in his head.
1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes 2nd Intermeane 65 in Wks. II I haue a sweet tooth yet.
1710 J. Addison Tatler No. 255. ⁋2 A liquorish Palate, or a sweet Tooth (as they call it).
1899 J. London Let. 29 July (1966) 45 If you're a sweet tooth you will not receive accommodation here except in the fruit line and the candy stores.
1904 P. Fountain Great North-West x. 96 Americans have the sweet-tooth highly developed.
1946 D. Thomas Deaths & Entrances 14 Till the sweet tooth of my love bit dry.
1960 Times 5 July 16/5 A symphony for sweet-tooths.
sweet wine n. wine having a sweet taste (as distinguished from dry wine); wine in the manufacture of which ‘sweets’ or syrup is added.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > wine > types of wine > [noun] > sweet wine
honey-teareOE
sweet winec1386
bastard?c1425
dulce1601
brown bastard1609
dulce1849
vino dolce1902
vino dulce1911
vin doux1958
sticky1982
c1386 G. Chaucer Wife of Bath's Prol. 459 When I had dronke a draughte of swete wyn.
1430–1 Rolls of Parl. IV. 369/1 Every Tonne of swete Wyn..commyng in to this saide Roialme, be weye of Merchandise.
1542 A. Borde Compend. Regyment Helth xxxiv. sig. M.iiiv Swete wynes be good for them the whiche be in consumpcion.
1797 Encycl. Brit. XII. 202/1 The white of an egg, milk, and sweet-wine.
1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. III. 118 The liquid..acquires a ropy consistence as is sometimes observed when sweet wines are kept for a time.
b. spec. in distinctive names of sweet-scented or sweet-flavoured species or varieties of plants, fruits, etc., sweet-briar n., sweet-gale n., sweet pea n., sweet-william n.
sweet almond n.
ΚΠ
1718 J. Quincy Pharmacopœia Officinalis ii. iv. 114 Sweet Almonds. These are of a soft, sweet, grateful Taste.
sweet ballocks n. Obsolete
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > orchids
satyrionOE
bollockwort?a1300
sanicle14..
bollock?a1425
martagon1548
orchis1559
dogstones1562
hare's-ballocks1562
stone1562
bollock grass1578
dog's cods1578
dog's cullions1578
double-leaf1578
fly-orchis1578
goat's cullions1578
goat's orchis1578
priest's pintle1578
twayblade1578
bee-orchis1597
bifoil1597
bird's nest1597
bird's orchis1597
butterfly orchis1597
fenny-stones1597
gelded satyrion1597
gnat satyrion1597
humble-bee orchis1597
lady's slipper1597
sweet ballocks1597
two-blade1605
cullions1611
bee-flower1626
fly-flower1640
man orchis1670
musk orchis1670
moccasin flower1680
gnat-flower1688
faham tea1728
Ophrys1754
green man orchis1762
Arethusa1764
honey flower1771
cypripedium1775
rattlesnake plantain1778
Venus's slipper1785
Adam and Eve1789
lizard orchis179.
epidendrum1791
Pogonia?1801
Vanda1801
cymbidium1815
Oncidium1822
putty-root1822
Noah's Ark1826
yellow moccasin1826
gongora1827
cattleya1828
green man1828
nervine1828
stanhopea1829
dove-flower1831
catasetum1836
Odontoglossum1836
Miltonia1837
letter plant1838
spread eagle1838
letter-leaf1839
swan-plant1841
orchid1843
disa1844
masdevallia1845
Phalaenopsis1846
faham1850
Indian crocus1850
moccasin plant1850
pleione1851
dove orchis1852
nerve root1854
Holy Ghost flower1862
basket-plant1865
lizard's tongue1866
mousetail1866
Sobralia1866
swan-neck1866
swanwort1866
Indian shoe1876
odontoglot1879
wreathewort1879
moth orchid1880
rattlesnake orchid1881
dendrobe1882
dove-plant1882
Madeira orchis1882
man orchis1882
swan-flower1884
slipper-orchid1885
slipper orchis1889
mayflower1894
scorpion orchid1897
moederkappie1910
dove orchid1918
monkey orchid1925
man orchid1927
1597 J. Gerard Herball i. 169 Testiculus Odoratus... Ladie traces:..of some sweete Ballocks, sweete Cods, sweete Cullions.
sweet basil n.
ΚΠ
1647 H. Hexham Copious Eng. & Netherduytch Dict. (Herbs) Sweete Basill, wilde Christus oogen, ofte Gennettekens.
1820 J. Keats Isabella in Lamia & Other Poems 75 She..o'er it set Sweet Basil, which her tears kept ever wet.
sweet bent n.
sweet birch n.
ΚΠ
1796 P. A. Nemnich Allgemeines Polyglotten-Lex. Sweet birch, Betula nigra.
1861 R. Bentley Man. Bot. ii. iii. 652 The bark of B[etula] lenta, known in the United States as Sweet Birch or Cherry Birch.
sweet calabash n.
ΚΠ
1796 P. A. Nemnich Allgemeines Polyglotten-Lex. Sweet calabash, Passiflora laurifolia.
sweet calamus n.
sweet cassava n.
sweet cicely n.
ΚΠ
1787–9 W. Withering Brit. Plants (1796) II. 306 Scandix odorata..Sweet Cicely..Sweet Fern.
sweet clover n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > leguminous plants > [noun] > sweet trefoil
salad clover1562
old sow1855
sweet trefoil1859
sweet clover1867
1867 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (ed. 5) 128 Melilotus,..Melilot. Sweet Clover.
sweet coltsfoot n.
ΚΠ
1867 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (ed. 5) 227 Nardosmia, Sweet Coltsfoot.
sweet gum n. (also sweet gum-tree)
sweet horse-mint n.
sweet locust n.
ΚΠ
1819 A. L. Hillhouse tr. F. A. Michaux N. Amer. Sylva II. 137 In different parts of the United States, this species [sc. Gleditsia triacanthos] is called indifferently Sweet Locust and Honey Locust.
1863 Chambers's Encycl. Honey Locust Tree..also known as the Sweet Locust and Black Locust.
sweet manioc n.
ΚΠ
1863 H. W. Bates Naturalist on River Amazons II. iii. 215 A superior kind of meal is manufactured at Ega of the sweet mandioca (Manihot Aypi).
sweet marjoram n.
ΚΠ
1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus Amaracus..sweete [1545–52 Elyot, soote] maioram.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) iv. v. 16 Indeed sir she was the sweete Margerom of the sallet, or rather the hearbe of grace. View more context for this quotation
sweet maudlin n.
sweet navew n.
sweet oleander n.
ΚΠ
1886 H. Yule & A. C. Burnell Hobson-Jobson Sweet Oleander,..the common oleander, Nerium odorum.
sweet orange n.
ΚΠ
1785 J. Woodforde Diary 19 Apr. (1926) II. 185 To a Dozen of sweet Oranges to carry home pd 0. 1. 6.
1796 P. A. Nemnich Allgemeines Polyglotten-Lex. Sweet orange, Citrus aurantium sinense.
1861 R. Bentley Man. Bot. ii. iii. 495 The rind of the Sweet Orange is an aromatic stimulant and tonic.
sweet orchis n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > orchids > helleborine or lady's tresses
lady's traces1548
orchis1578
sweet orchis1578
butterfly orchis1597
triple Lady's traces1611
goodyera1813
lady's tresses1820
1578 H. Lyte tr. R. Dodoens Niewe Herball ii. lvi. 222 The sweete Orchis, or Ladie traces are moste commonly to be found..vpon hilles and Downes.
sweet pepper-bush n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > [noun] > clethra trees
clethra1779
sweet pepper-bush1814
lily-of-the-valley tree1885
sweet pepper1923
1814 O. O. Rich Synopsis Genera N. Amer. Plants 50 Clethra. Sweet Pepper-Bush.
1845 A. Wood Class-bk. Bot. ii. 233 C. alnifolia. Sweet-pepper Bush.
1901 C. T. Mohr Plant Life Alabama 652 Sweet Pepper Bush... Common in the coast plain on swampy banks of pine-barren streams.
1976 Hortus Third (L. H. Bailey Hortorium) 286/2 Sweet pepperbush... Summer to autumn.
sweet pine-sap n.
ΚΠ
1867 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (ed. 5) 304 Schweinitzia, Sweet Pine~sap.
sweet pishamin n.
ΚΠ
1836 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Plants (rev. ed.) 1286 Carpodinus, Sweet Pishamin..produces green flowers.
sweet-smallage n.
ΚΠ
1697 J. Ray in Philos. Trans. 1695–7 (Royal Soc.) 19 635 They tasted somewhat like the Root of Seleri, or Sweet Smallage.
sweet sorghum n.
sweet stones n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1597 J. Gerard Herball i. 167 The first kind of Sweete stones is a small, base, and lowe plant.
sweet sultan tea n.
ΚΠ
1706 J. Gardiner tr. R. Rapin Of Gardens i. 34 Now larger Cyanies begin to spring, Sweet-Sultans nam'd from the Byzantine King.
sweet trefoil n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > leguminous plants > [noun] > sweet trefoil
salad clover1562
old sow1855
sweet trefoil1859
sweet clover1867
1859 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. (1860) Sweet Trefoil, common name for the Trifolium cæruleum.
sweet violet n.
sweet virgin's bower n.
sweet woodruff n.
ΚΠ
1800 J. E. Smith Eng. Bot. XI. 755 Asperula odorata. Sweet Woodruff or Woodroof.
c. Parasynthetic. See also sweet-breasted adj. at Compounds 4. Also sweet-scented adj.
sweet-beamed adj.
ΚΠ
1730 J. Thomson Autumn in Seasons 126 Attemper'd suns arise, Sweet-beam'd.
sweet-blooded adj.
ΚΠ
1859 ‘G. Eliot’ Adam Bede I. i. v. 121 Large-hearted, sweet-blooded natures that never know a narrow or a grudging thought.
sweet-breathed adj. /-brɛθt/
ΚΠ
1617 W. Drummond Forth Feasting sig. A2v Sweet-breath'd Zephyres.
1623 J. Webster Deuils Law-case i. ii O sweet-breath'd monkeys, how they grow together!
1814 W. Wordsworth Excursion vii. 343 The sweet-breathed violet of the shade. View more context for this quotation
1881 O. Wilde Poems 209 Most bounteous Spring! That cans't give increase to the sweet-breath'd kine.
1949 M. Mead Male & Female xiv. 283 Life is a race that boys and girls must run clear-eyed, sweet-breathed, well bathed.
sweet-conditioned adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1630 P. Massinger Renegado v. ii. sig. K4 Our sweete condition'd princesse, fayre Donusa.
sweet-dispositioned adj.
ΚΠ
1647 W. Bridge Saints Hiding-place 30 We have a meek and sweet disposition'd Saviour.
sweet-eyed adj.
ΚΠ
1812 W. Tennant Anster Fair i. xxxi. 16 Sweet-ey'd lass.
sweet-faced adj.
ΚΠ
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream i. ii. 80 Piramus is a sweete fac't man.
a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Coxcombe iii. ii, in Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Oov/2 Good sweet fact serving-man.
1885 ‘H. Conway’ Slings & Arrows 168 A pale, sweet-faced woman,..who was dressed as a Sister of Charity.
1981 M. Warner Joan of Arc xiii. 267 The young Joan of Arc, the sweet-faced child of hagiography.
sweet-flavoured adj.
ΚΠ
1952 A. G. L. Hellyer Sanders' Encycl. Gardening (ed. 22) 9 [Actinidia]purpurea, sweet-flavoured purple berries.
sweet-fleshed adj.
ΚΠ
1923 D. H. Lawrence Birds, Beasts & Flowers (London ed.) 41 A rock-living, sweet-fleshed sea-anemone.
sweet-flowered adj.
ΚΠ
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Sequinant, the sweet-flowred Rush tearmed Squinant.
sweet-graced adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) ii. xi. sig. X2v Whom yet with a sweete-graced bitternes they blamed.
sweet-leafed adj.
ΚΠ
1749 W. Shenstone Irregular Ode 30 The sweet-leaft eglantine.
sweet-mannered adj.
ΚΠ
1887 G. M. Hopkins Further Lett. (1956) 183 The youngest boy Leo is a remarkably winning sweetmannered young fellow.
sweet-minded adj.
ΚΠ
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) ii. iv. sig. Q3 The sweete minded Philoclea.
sweet-natured adj.
ΚΠ
1650 R. Stapleton tr. F. Strada De Bello Belgico vi. 23 A plaine and sweete-natured man.
1876 ‘G. Eliot’ Daniel Deronda IV. viii. lviii. 178 The sweet-natured, strong Rex.
sweet-numbered adj. Obsolete number n. 17a.
ΚΠ
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. ii. ii. 431 Sweet-numbred Homer.
sweet-savoured adj. (cf. Middle English swote sauoured).
ΚΠ
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 326/2 Swete savoured, aromaticq.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) ii. ii. 120 That neuer words were musicke to thine eare,..That neuer meat sweet-sauour'd in thy taste. View more context for this quotation
sweet-shaped adj.
sweet-smelled adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1632 S. Rutherford Lett. (1863) I. 82 The sweetest-smelled flowers.
sweet-souled adj.
ΚΠ
1747 W. Shenstone Lett. (1777) xlv. 120 That sweet-souled bard Mr. James Thomson.
1790 J. Wolcot Benevolent Epist. to Sylvanus Urban in Wks. (1812) II. 262 Each sweet-soul'd Stanza.
a1930 D. H. Lawrence Etruscan Places (1932) i. 12 Those pure, clean-living, sweet-souled Romans, who smashed nation after nation.
sweet-sounded adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1659 O. Walker Some Instr. Art of Oratory 25 Words, smooth and sweeter-sounded..are to be used.
sweet-tasted adj.
ΚΠ
1807 T. Thomson Syst. Chem. (ed. 3) II. 74 A sweet-tasted salt, called muriate of glucina.
1913 J. Masefield Daffodil Fields 31 Cropping sweet-tasted pasture.
sweet-tempered adj.
ΚΠ
1632 P. Massinger & N. Field Fatall Dowry iii. sig. G4 Sweet temper'd Lord adieu.
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones IV. xi. ii. 109 She's a sweet-tempered, good-humoured Lady. View more context for this quotation
1845 C. Dickens Chimes iv. 145 The sweetest-looking, sweetest-tempered girl, eyes ever saw.
sweet-toned adj.
ΚΠ
1870 W. C. Bryant tr. Homer Iliad I. ix. 274 A sweet-toned harp.
sweet-tuned adj.
ΚΠ
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. ii. i. 275 The Nightingales sweet-tuned voice.
1770 H. Brooke Fool of Quality V. xvii. 227 A well known and sweet tuned voice.
sweet-voiced adj.
ΚΠ
?1807–8 W. Wordsworth Somnambulist 17 A Bird of plumage bright, Sweet-voiced.
1919 J. Masefield Reynard the Fox 11 John Pym..Gross and blunt-headed like a shrike. Yet sweet-voiced as a piping flute.
d. With nouns, forming adjectives having the sense of parasynthetic combinations.
sweet-breath n.
ΚΠ
1648 R. Herrick Hesperides sig. M While sweet-breath Nimphs, attend on you this Day.
e.
sweet-lip n. any of several marine fishes with prominent mouths, esp. an Australian food fish, Lethrinus chrysostomus, or a brightly coloured tropical fish of the family Plectorhynchidæ.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > miscellaneous types > [noun]
mudfish1502
sprat1552
frogfish1598
rockfish1605
yellowtaila1622
sleeper1668
picarel1688
hogfish1735
porkfish1735
sucker1753
zebrafish1771
yellowbelly1775
white steenbras1801
stone-toter1817
stargazer1842
warehou1848
baardman1853
goatfish1864
holostome1864
spot snapper1876
suck-fish1876
mademoiselle1882
queenfish1883
cigar-fish1884
emperor fish1884
rock beauty1885
oilfish1896
aholehole1897
berrugate1898
Photoblepharon1902
sweet-lip1934
rabbitfish1941
redbait1960
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sparidae (sea-breams) > [noun] > miscellaneous types of
sheep's head1676
stompneus1705
melanure1828
steentjie1893
zebra1905
sweet-lip1934
1934 T. Wood Cobbers xvii. 223 Sweet-lip, and barracouta, a slim silver sword.
1951 T. C. Roughley Fish & Fisheries Austral. (rev. ed.) 75 The best-known of the emperor breams is the sweet-lip or red-mouthed emperor.
1974 J. M. Thomson Fish of Ocean & Shore xiii. 142 The sweetlip emperor, or simply sweetlip..is highly regarded for the table.
sweet-lips n. Obsolete a delicate eater, epicure.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > eating > gastronomy > [noun] > gastronome or epicure
viandera1556
sweet-lips1580
deipnosophist1581
feaster1585
epicure1586
friand1598
palatist1620
goinfre1643
palate-mana1661
palate-peoplea1661
bon-vivant1695
belly-critica1711
gourmand1758
turtle-eatera1774
connoisseur1796
gullet-fancier1805
gastrophilist1814
gastrologer1820
gastronomer1820
gastrophile1820
gourmet1820
palatician1821
gastrologist1822
gastronome1823
gastronomist1825
degustator1833
aristologist1835
opsophagist1854
gastrosoph1855
bon viveur1865
gastrosopher1894
foodist1906
foodie1980
1580 C. Hollyband Treasurie French Tong Vn friand, friolet, a licorous felow, a sweete lips.
sweet-throat n. sweet-voiced.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > singing > singing voice > [adjective] > qualities of voice > having voice of specific quality
well-voiced1634
sweet-breasteda1640
silvery1821
sweet-throat1870
1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 74 The bright-billed sweet-throat bird.
C2.
sweet Alice n. sweet alyssum, Lobularia maritima (cf. alyssum n. 2) or Arabis alpina, another small cruciferous herb with white flowers.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > cruciferous flowers > white flowers
sweet alyssum1790
milkmaid1876
snow-on-the-mountain1882
sweet Alice1886
1886 J. Britten & R. Holland Dict. Eng. Plant-names 459 Sweet Alice. Arabis alpina, L... A corruption of Sweet Alison, which name belongs more properly to Alyssum maritimum, L.
1927 V. Woolf To Lighthouse i. iv. 36 She was picking Sweet Alice on the bank.
sweet alyssum n. the white-flowered annual plant Lobularia maritima (family Brassicaceae( Cruciferae)), a common bedding plant in gardens.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > cruciferous flowers > white flowers
sweet alyssum1790
milkmaid1876
snow-on-the-mountain1882
sweet Alice1886
1790 Bot. Mag. 3 §́̇101 (heading) Sweet Alyssum.
1822 S. Clarke Hortus Anglicus II. 150 A. maritimum, Sweet Alyssum.
1866 J. Syme in J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. 536 The Sweet Alyssum of gardens is found in some places of Britain, but only imperfectly naturalized where escaped from gardens.
1873 H. W. Longfellow Rhyme Sir Christopher 40 A modest flower~bed thickly sown With sweet alyssum and columbine.
1934 F. S. Fitsgerald & Z. Fitzgerald Show Mr. & Mrs. F. to Number— in Jazz Age (1996) 51 We rode bicycles along the windswept causeways and stared in a dreamy daze at such phenomena as roosters scratching amidst the sweet alyssum.
2006 M. Pollan Omnivore's Dilemma ix. 165 Sweet alyssum..attracts the lacewings and syrphid flies that eat the aphids that can molest lettuces.
sweet-apple n. a name for the sweet-sop n., also called sugar-apple.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > tropical exotic fruit > other tropical or exotic fruits
tamarind1539
guava1555
genipat1568
jack1582
genipap1613
custard apple1648
star apple1693
sweet-sop1696
breadfruit1697
sugar-apple1739
sweet-apple1760
guarri1789
ackee1792
marmalade-box1796
five-corner1826
jakkalsbessie1854
Molucca berry1861
bullock's heart1866
guava-apple1866
vegetable egg1866
Jew plum1880
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > of tropical America > sweet-sop tree
sweet-sop1696
water apple1696
sugar-apple1739
purple apple1754
custard tree1760
sweet-apple1760
sugar-sop1847
1760 J. Lee Introd. Bot. App. 295/1 Apple, Sweet, Annona.
sweet bay n. (a) the bay laurel, Laurus nobilis; (b) in North America applied to Magnolia virginiana, also called white bay; also attributive and in combination.
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the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > bay-tree and allies > [noun]
laure971
laurela1375
laurel-treea1375
laurya1400
Daphnec1430
bay1530
sweet bay1716
red bay1731
bay-gall1775
sweet bay laurel1858
Oregon myrtle1908
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > cultivated or ornamental trees and shrubs > [noun] > magnolias
sweet bay1716
umbrella-tree1739
swamp laurel1743
magnolia1748
tulip-tree1751
beaver-tree1756
tulip-laurel1766
champakc1770
cucumber-tree1784
mountain magnolia1785
swamp sassafras1796
laurel magnolia1806
beaver-wood1810
big laurel1810
yulan1822
chatta1834
cucumber1835
port wine magnolia1943
magnolioid1988
1716 Petiveriana i. 246 Barbadoes Sweet-Bay.
1767 Bartram's Jrnl. 29 in W. Stork Acct. E. Florida (ed. 2) On it grew great magnolia, sweet-bay, live-oak, palms.
1850 S. F. Cooper Rural Hours 476 The small Laurel Magnolia, or Sweet Bay, is found as far north as New York, in swampy grounds.
1903 Flora & Sylva 1 19/1 The Laurel Magnolia or Sweet Bay..is certainly a very handsome shrub.
1938 M. K. Rawlings Yearling xviii. 217 The sweet bay was still in bloom, filling the sink-hole with its fragrance.
1958 G. A. Petrides Field Guide Trees & Shrubs 303 Sweet~bay Magnolia... A large shrub or small tree with thick, rather leathery, elliptic leaves that are evergreen.
sweet bay laurel n. = sweet bay n. (a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > bay-tree and allies > [noun]
laure971
laurela1375
laurel-treea1375
laurya1400
Daphnec1430
bay1530
sweet bay1716
red bay1731
bay-gall1775
sweet bay laurel1858
Oregon myrtle1908
1858 W. Baird Cycl. Nat. Sci. at Lauraceæ The common, or sweetbay laurel, Laurus nobilis.
sweet-bay willow n. (also sweet-bay-leaved willow) Salix pentandra.
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the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > willow and allies > [noun] > other types of willow
red willow1547
water willow1583
goat's willow1597
rose willow1597
sweet willow1597
French willow1601
siler1607
palm-withy1609
sallowie1610
swallowtail willow1626
willow bay1650
black willow1670
crack-willow1670
grey willow1697
water sallow1761
almond willowa1763
swallow-tailed willow1764
swamp willow1765
golden osier1772
golden willow1772
purple willow1773
sand-willow1786
goat willow1787
purple osier1797
whipcord1812
Arctic willow1818
sage-willow1846
pussy willow1851
Kilmarnock willow1854
sweet-bay willow1857
pussy1858
palm willow1869
Spaniard1871
ground-willow1875
Spanish willow1875
snap-willow1880
diamond willow1884
sandbar willow1884
pussy palm1886
creeping willow1894
bat-willow1907
cricket bat willow1907
silver willow1914
1857 A. Pratt Flowering Plants & Ferns Great Brit. V. 78 S[alix] pentandra (Sweet Bay-leaved Willow).
sweet-bough n. U.S. an early variety of apple or the tree that bears it.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > apple tree > varieties of
birtle-tree1483
wyde?1523
renneta1568
pearmain1597
codling tree1629
codling1651
passe-pomme1691
Rhode Island greening1795
Spitzenberg1795
tulip-apple1842
Wagener1848
sweet-bough1850
Lord Derby1862
Chinese crab1882
1850 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Patents 1849: Agric. 281 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (31st Congr., 1st Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. 20, Pt. 2) VI Of summer apples, the best..are the early-harvest and early sweet~bough.
1906 Harper's Mag. Apr. 667 He halted under the sweet-bough and gave one branch a shake.
sweet broom n. (a) ? some species of broom ( Cytisus or Genista); (b) a name for Scoparia dulcis (N.O. Scrophulariaceæ), also called sweet broom-weed n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Scrophulariaceae (figwort and allies) > [noun] > sweetweed
West Indian tea1728
goatweed1756
sweetweed1760
sweet broom1884
liquorice weed1889
sweet broom-weed1890
1736 N. Bailey Dict. Domesticum 554 Sweet-Broom.
1884 W. Miller Dict. Eng. Names Plants Scoparia dulcis, Sweet Broom.
sweet broom-weed n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Scrophulariaceae (figwort and allies) > [noun] > sweetweed
West Indian tea1728
goatweed1756
sweetweed1760
sweet broom1884
liquorice weed1889
sweet broom-weed1890
1890 Cent. Dict. at Scoparia S[coparia] dulcis is used as a stomachic in the West Indies, and is called sweet broomweed and licorice-weed.
sweet buckeye n. a yellow-flowered horse chestnut, Aesculus octandra, found in eastern North America.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > horse-chestnut tree and allies > [noun]
horse chestnut1597
poison root1712
Pavia1731
buckeye1763
buckwood1787
Ohio buckeye1810
sweet buckeye1815
chestnut1842
1815 D. Drake Nat. & Statist. View Cincinnati ii. 77 Sweet buckeye.
1943 R. Peattie Great Smokies & Blue Ridge 155 The sweet buckeye or horse chestnut is found here up to 125 feet in height.
1969 T. H. Everett Living Trees of World xxii. 224/2 The largest of the Americans is the sweet or yellow buckeye.
sweet cane n. = sweet flag n.
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the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > reedy or aquatic grasses > [noun] > sweet flag
beeworteOE
sweet calamusa1398
acorus?a1425
acorum1601
sweet rush1607
sweet cane1611
sweet smelling flag1640
sweet flag1790
myrtle flag1796
myrtle grass1796
flag-root1851
myrtle sedge1857
sweet sedge1857
1611 Bible (King James) Isa. xliii. 24 Thou hast bought mee no sweete cane with money. View more context for this quotation
1718 J. Quincy Pharmacopœia Officinalis ii. i. 85 Sweet-Cane..is a spicy bitterish Root.
1822 J. Campbell Trav. S. Afr.: Narr. 2nd Journey I. xx. 226 A constant succession of fresh visitants arrived, several of whom brought us presents of sweet cane.
sweet chestnut n. the common or Spanish chestnut, Castanea sativa, as distinguished from the bitter inedible horse chestnut n.; also, the fruit or timber of this tree.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > edible nuts or nut-trees > [noun] > chestnut
chesteine1362
castanea1398
chestnut1519
Sardian acorn1551
maroon1594
sweet chestnut1818
marron1877
Sardinian acorn1895
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > edible nuts or nut-trees > [noun] > chestnut > chestnut tree
chesteinea700
chesteine-treea1330
castanea1398
chestnut tree1535
chestnut1578
Spanish chestnut1763
sweet chestnut1818
1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian vii, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. III. 172 Large sweet chesnut-trees and beeches.
1838 J. C. Loudon Arboretum III. 1983 The term Sweet Chestnut is applied with reference to the fruit.
1909 H. J. Elwes & A. Henry Trees Great Brit. & Ireland IV. 844 The Sweet or Spanish Chestnut..is..one of the largest trees in England.
1956 Handbk. Hardwoods (Forest Products Res. Lab.) 72 Sweet chestnut bears a close resemblance to oak but is more easily worked.
1977 New Yorker 4 July 22/2 If he could, he would supplement local bounty only with sweet chestnuts and Korean pears.
1981 G. Keynes Gates of Memory xxix. 351 Nearer to us were glorious stands of trees,..sweet chestnuts hundreds of years old with twisted trunks.
sweet corn n. U.S. a sweet-flavoured variety of maize.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > cereal, corn, or grain > [noun] > maize > maize plants
maizea1544
Indian wheat1578
Guinea wheat1598
corn1608
sweet corn1646
Virginia wheat1651
soft corn1751
zea1760
popcorn1838
pod corn1884
pod maize1904
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > cereal, corn, or grain > [noun] > maize > types of
green cornc1450
flint corn1705
flint1802
sweet corna1817
squaw corn1823
dent corn1853
tassel-corn1883
country gentleman1892
1646 E. Hopkins Let. in Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc. (1863) 4th Ser. VI. 334 Wequash Cooks brother tooke from him..2 bushell of sweet corne.
1810 T. Jefferson Garden Bk. (1944) 424 [Sowed]..Sweet or shriveled corn in the N.W. corner.
a1817 T. Dwight Trav. New-Eng. & N.-Y. (1821) I. 49 At New-Haven the sweet corn may be had in full perfection for the table by successive plantings from the middle of July to the middle of November.
1909 ‘O. Henry’ Roads of Destiny xxii. 364 Cigarettes rolled with sweet corn husk were as honey to Buck's palate.
1917 G. F. Will & G. E. Hyde Corn among Indians 118 The Upper Missouri tribes prepared this ‘sweet corn’ for winter use in two ways: by boiling it in kettles, and by roasting it in fires.
1974 A. Price Other Paths to Glory ii. iii. 139 To the north..of the house there had been..a single tiny field of sweet corn.
sweet fern n. a name for two plants with fern-like leaves and aromatic scent: (a) locally in England, the sweet cicely, Myrrhis odorata (N.O. Umbelliferæ); (b) in North America, the shrub Comptonia asplenifolia (N.O. Myricaceæ).
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the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > myrica and allies > [noun]
galec1000
Dutch myrtle1597
sweet willow1597
gow1598
sweet-gale1640
candle-tree1692
candleberry tree1731
tallow shrub1770
myrica1791
wax-tree1791
wax-plant1801
wax-myrtle1813
Comptonia1823
tallow-bush1835
wax-berry1835
sweet fern1849
bog myrtle1866
meadow fern1876
flea-wood1892
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Umbelliferae (umbellifers) > [noun] > cicely or chervil
myrrhis1548
myrrh1597
sweet cicely1597
sweet chervil1688
sweet fern1849
1849 J. H. Balfour Man. Bot. §1037 The leaves of Comptonia asplenifolia, Sweet Fern, are found..to contain peculiar glands.
sweet flag n. a rush-like plant, Acorus Calamus (N.O. Araceæ or Orontiaceæ), widely distributed in the North Temperate zone, growing in water and wet places, with an aromatic odour, and having a thick creeping rootstock of a pungent aromatic flavour.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > reedy or aquatic grasses > [noun] > sweet flag
beeworteOE
sweet calamusa1398
acorus?a1425
acorum1601
sweet rush1607
sweet cane1611
sweet smelling flag1640
sweet flag1790
myrtle flag1796
myrtle grass1796
flag-root1851
myrtle sedge1857
sweet sedge1857
1640 J. Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum 139 This sweet smelling Flagge hath many flaggy long and narrow fresh greene leaves.
1728 R. Bradley Dict. Botanicum (at cited word) Calamus aromaticus Off. is also call'd Acorus, and in English, The sweet smelling Flag.]
1790 L. Castiglioni Viaggio negli Stati Uniti II. 185 Acorus verus..Sweet-flagg.
1796 W. Withering Arrangem. Brit. Plants (ed. 3) III. 917 Sweet Flag.
1858 P. L. Simmonds Dict. Trade Products Sweet-flag..is..employed to scent aromatic baths, perfumery, and hair-powder.
sweet gum n. (also sweet gum-tree) = liquidambar n.
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the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular tree or plant yielding useful gum or resin > [noun] > liquidambar tree
sweet gum1700
copalm1775
red gum tree1839
liquidambar1843
satin walnut1879
red gum1883
1700 Baltimore Rent Rolls in Maryland Hist. Mag. (1924) 19 367 127 acre Sur[veyed]..begun at a bounded sweet gum.
1709 J. Lawson New Voy. Carolina 95 The sweet Gum-Tree, so call'd, because of the fragrant Gum it yields in the Spring-time, upon Incision of the Bark, or Wood.
1717 Petiveriana iii. 195 Sweet-gum. Because in the Spring it yeilds a fragrant Gum, upon cutting its Bark or Wood, of great use in Tetters, Scurfs, Inflammations, etc.
1856 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (1860) 148 Liquidambar, Sweet-Gum Tree.
1869 A. J. Evans Vashti iii. 43 The trunk of a decayed and fallen sweet-gum.
1884 W. Miller Dict. Eng. Names Plants Liquidambar styraceflua, Copalm Balsam-tree, Sweet Gumtree.
1981 A. Mitchell Gardener's Bk. Trees 101/1 For summer foliage and autumn colours the Sweet gum has few equals.
sweet melon n. = spanspek n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > gourd > [noun] > melon > musk melons
muskmelon1573
sugar-melon1600
cantaloupe1739
rock melon1789
mango1866
sweet melon1883
spanspek1886
honeydew1916
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > gourd > melon > other types of melon
melopepon1555
muskmelon1573
macock1588
sugar-melon1600
cantaloupe1739
rock cantaloupe1776
rock melon1789
nutmeg melon1811
citron1826
pie melon1857
sweet melon1883
spanspek1886
honeydew1916
pepino1922
Ogen melon1967
1883 J. Roth Man. S. Afr. Gardening 78 The Water Melons must not be ripped or cut, as required by Sweet Melons.
1970 Rand Daily Mail (Johannesburg) 28 Feb. 7/4 South Africans also speak of..‘sweet melons’.
sweet milk-vetch n. Astragalus glycyphyllus, with sweet-flavoured leaves.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > leguminous plants > [noun] > milk-vetch
astragalus1548
sea trefoil1548
sea trifoly1548
milk-vetch1597
liquorice vetch1640
prairie pea1848
sweet milk-vetch1860
buffalo-bean1906
1860 Chambers's Encycl. I. 504/1 The Sweet Milk-vetch, or Wild Liquorice.
sweet nasturtium n. (see quot. 1712). Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines for specific purpose > preparations treating or preventing specific ailments > [noun] > for indigestion > plant-derived
cardamom?c1425
sweet nasturtium1712
hydrastis1861
papain1880
1712 J. Browne tr. P. Pomet et al. Compl. Hist. Druggs I. 21 It is call'd Cardamome, or sweet Nasturtium, because it has a smell much like the Nasturtium.
sweet olive n. an evergreen shrub, Osmanthus fragrans, of the family Oleaceæ, native to eastern Asia and bearing clusters of small fragrant white flowers.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > cultivated or ornamental trees and shrubs > [noun] > osmanthus
Osmanthus1836
sweet olive1861
tea olive1952
1789 W. Aiton Hortus Kewensis I. 14 Sweet-scented Olive. Nat[ive] of Cochinchina, China, and Japan.]
1861 S. K. Holmes Jrnl. 15 Oct. in Brokenburn (1955) 61 Mrs. Carson gave Mamma plants of sweet olive..and purple magnolia.
1899 Scribner's Mag. 25 50/1 As gay with flowers as a girl's hat, and as fragrant of sweet-olive, citronelle, and heliotrope as her garments.
1958 S. A. Grau Hard Blue Sky iii. 122 There was..the winey odor of the sweet olive.
sweet pepper n. (a) = pepper n. 2b; (b) = sweet pepperbush at pepperbush n. 2b.
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the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > [noun] > clethra trees
clethra1779
sweet pepper-bush1814
lily-of-the-valley tree1885
sweet pepper1923
1923 H. C. Thompson Veg. Crops xxv. 400 Of the large-fruited, sweet peppers, Ruby King, Bell or Bullnose,..and Golden Queen are well-known varieties.
1944 E. A. Holton Yankees were like This 84 The perfume of bush honeysuckle and sweet pepper from the swamps.
1969 S. G. Harrison et al. Oxf. Bk. Food Plants 128/1 The larger-fruited kinds [of Capsicum annuum] are quite mild in taste and are known as ‘sweet peppers’.
1972 Country Life 16 Mar. 625/3 Every garden that can provide lime-free soil ought to contain a bush of the Sweet Pepper, Clethra alnifolia.
sweet plum n. (a) see quot. 1796; (b) the Queensland plum, Owenia cerasifera; (c) a species of hog-plum, Spondias pleigyna.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > stone fruit > plum > other types of
white plumc1330
bullacea1375
myxe?1440
prunelloa1450
bullace-fruit1530
horse plum1530
plum1530
wheat-plum1538
wheaten plum1542
choke-plum1556
pear plum1573
finger plum1577
scad1577
skeg1601
merchant1602
bullace-plum1608
malacadonian1608
prune plum1613
date plum1626
mussel plum1626
amber plum1629
black plum1629
primordian1629
queen mother1629
winter crack1629
myrobalan1630
Christian1651
Monsieur's plum1658
cinnamon-plum1664
date1664
primordial1664
Orleans1674
mirabelle1706
myrobalan plum1708
Mogul1718
mussel1718
Chickasaw plum1760
blue gage1764
magnum bonum1764
golden drop1772
beach-plum1785
sweet plum1796
winesour1836
wild plum1838
quetsch1839
egg-plum1859
Victoria1860
cherry plum1866
bladder-plum1869
prune1872
sour plum1874
Carlsbad plum1885
horse-jug1886
French plum1939
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > of tropical America > other American fruit-plants
guava1555
anchovy pear1657
river pear1696
sour-sop tree1696
monkey apple1750
stopper-berry tree1750
sour-sop1753
chocho1756
sweet plum1796
pequi1819
Spanish plum1823
jaboticaba1824
christophene1830
Quito orange1846
pepino1850
mountain mango1861
chayote1884
Suriname cherry1895
feijoa1898
choko1902
1796 P. A. Nemnich Allgemeines Polyglotten-Lex. Sweet plumb, Prunus americana.
1874 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. (rev. ed.) Suppl. 1324/2 Owenia cerasifera is called the Sweet Plum or Rancooran.
1889 J. H. Maiden Useful Native Plants Austral. 599 Spondias pleiogyna,..‘Sweet Plum’, or ‘Burdekin Plum’.
sweet potato n. the edible tuber of a perennial vine, Ipomœa batatas, native to South America and widely cultivated elsewhere.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > root vegetable > [noun] > sweet potato
potato1565
batata1577
potato root1583
Spanish potato1599
red batata1696
Virginia potato1715
sweet potato1750
yam1753
kumara1773
boniato1800
camote1842
Carolina potato1848
Carolina1884
mickey1936
kau kau1937
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > root vegetables > sweet potato
batata1577
potato root1583
red batata1696
sweet potato1750
yam1753
kumara1773
camote1842
Carolina1884
1750 J. Birket Some Remarks Voy. N. Amer. 9 They have..abundance of..the Sweet Potatoe.
1775 B. Romans Conc. Nat. Hist. E. & W. Florida 84 They cultivate..the esculent Convolvulus, (vulgo) sweet potatoes.
1832 E. Lankester Veg. Substances Food 126 The plant carried to Ireland by Captain Hawkins, in 1565, was the Spanish batata, or sweet potato.
1972 Y. Lovelock Veg. Bk. i. 233 Sweet potato is now grown throughout the tropics.
1976 M. H. Kingston Woman Warrior (1977) 79 My mother liked to look at the ducks and plan how she would dig a pond for them near the sweet potato field.
sweet scabious n. Scabiosa atropurpurea; also applied to the North American Erigeron annuus (N.O. Compositæ); also E. philadelphicus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Compositae (composite plants) > [noun] > erigeron
sweet scabious1789
fleabane1813
mountain daisy1897
mare's tail1900
1789 W. Aiton Hortus Kewensis I. 137 Sweet Scabious. Nat[ive].
1796 P. A. Nemnich Allgemeines Polyglotten-Lex. Sweet scabious, Scabiosa atropurpurea.
1828 C. S. Rafinesque Med. Flora U.S. I. 162 Erigeron Philadelphicum... Vulgar Names—Skevish, Scabish, Sweet Scabious [etc.].
1856 A. Gray Man. Bot. Northern U.S. (1860) 198 Erigeron annuum..(Daisy Fleabane. Sweet Scabious).
1937 Range Plant Handbk. (U.S. Dept. Agric. Forest Service) W67 Annual wild-daisy (E. annuus) and Philadelphia wild-daisy, misnamed sweet scabious..are other wild-daisies with similar properties.
1976 Hortus Third (L. H. Bailey Hortorium) 1014/1 Sweet scabious..naturalized in California.
sweet sedge n. = sweet flag n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > reedy or aquatic grasses > [noun] > sweet flag
beeworteOE
sweet calamusa1398
acorus?a1425
acorum1601
sweet rush1607
sweet cane1611
sweet smelling flag1640
sweet flag1790
myrtle flag1796
myrtle grass1796
flag-root1851
myrtle sedge1857
sweet sedge1857
1857 A. Pratt Flowering Plants & Ferns Great Brit. V. 323 Acorus (Sweet Sedge).
sweet vernal grass n. Anthoxanthum odoratum (see vernal adj. 3b).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fodder plants > [noun] > grasses used for hay or pasture
windlestrawc1000
red grass1582
spring grass1643
sweet-grass1709
herd-grass1747
Guinea grass1756
vernal grass1762
vernal1771
Paspalum1772
buffalo grass1784
Rhode Island bent1790
red-top1792
finetop1824
kangaroo-grass1827
gamagrass1831
sweet vernal grass1839
yellow-top1839
grama1844
sesame grass1845
sacate1848
Para grass1850
Hungarian1859
alfilaria1860
sacaton1865
Mitchell grass1867
teosinte1877
Landsborough grass1883
turnip-grass1889
brown top1891
ichu1891
manna1897
Rhodes grass1903
Sudan1911
Kikuyu grass1913
never-fail1923
buffel grass1955
1839 J. Lindley School Bot. 187 Anthoxanthum..odoratum (Sweet Vernal Grass).
sweet willow n. (a) = sweet-bay willow n. (see willow n.); (b) = sweet-gale n.
ΚΠ
1597 J. Gerard Herball iii. 1228 Myrtus Brabantica, siue Elæagnus Cordi. Gaule, sweete Willow, or Dutch Myrtle tree.
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. at Salix The Bay-leav'd Sweet Willow.
1776 W. Withering Bot. Arrangem. Veg. Great Brit. II. 610 Gale..Sweet Willow. Dutch Myrtle. In marshy barren ground.
1839 J. J. Audubon Ornithol. Biogr. V. 288 A heavy growth of cotton-wood, ash, and sweet-willow.
1855 A. Pratt Flowering Plants & Ferns Great Brit. V. 56 Sweet Gale, or Dutch Myrtle..is called Sweet Willow.
C3. Combinations of the adverb (or in which sweet is in adverbial relation to the second element).
a. With participles and participial adjectives: see also sweet-recording adj., sweet-spoken adj. at Compounds 4 and sweet-smelling adj.
sweet-bleeding adj.
ΚΠ
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. A4 The Mirrhe sweete bleeding in the bitter wound.
sweet-breathing adj.
ΚΠ
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) ii. v. sig. Q8v It might seeme that Loue..was there to refreshe himselfe betweene their sweete-breathing lippes.
a1822 P. B. Shelley Cyclops in Posthumous Poems (1824) 351 Pied flowers, sweet-breathing.
1856 R. A. Vaughan Hours with Mystics (1860) I. 23 The sweet-breathing air.
sweet-complaining adj.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) iii. ii. 85 The nights dead silence Will well become such sweet complaining grieuance. View more context for this quotation
sweet-flowering adj.
ΚΠ
1596 Raigne of Edward III sig. F1 Sweete flowring peace. View more context for this quotation
sweet-flowing adj.
ΚΠ
1721 A. Ramsay Petit. Whin-bush Club i Sweet-flowing Clyde.
1784 W. Cowper Poplar Field 12 The scene where his melody charm'd me before, Resounds with his sweet-flowing ditty no more.
sweet-looking adj.
ΚΠ
1845 C. Dickens Chimes iv. 145 The sweetest-looking, sweetest-tempered girl, eyes ever saw.
sweet-murmuring adj.
ΚΠ
1743 R. Blair Grave 8 In grateful Errors thro' the Under-wood Sweet-murmuring.
sweet savouring adj. Obsolete
sweet-set adj.
ΚΠ
1592 Arden of Feversham iii. v. 146 How you women can insinuate, And cleare a trespasse with your sweete set tongue!
sweet-singing adj.
ΚΠ
a1593 C. Marlowe Hero & Leander (1598) ii. sig. Divv Sweet singing Meremaids, sported with their loues.
1740 A. Dewes in M. Delany Autobiogr. & Corr. (1861) II. 131 Do you ever hear from sweet-singing Birch?
sweet-smiling adj.
ΚΠ
1673 J. Milton On Death Fair Infant viii, in Poems (new ed.) 20 Wert thou that sweet smiling Youth!
sweet-sounding adj.
ΚΠ
1595 W. S. Lamentable Trag. Locrine i. i. 239 Plaidst thou as sweet, on the sweet sounding lute.
1743 P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Odes II. iv. iii. 17 Goddess of the sweet-sounding lute.
1910 W. de la Mare Three Mulla-mulgars v. 71 When you hear my sweet-sounding..song.
sweet-spun adj.
ΚΠ
a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Henry V ccclxxx, in Poems (1878) IV. 196 Nor lov'd Court-Sweets, nor Sweet Spun Dialects.
sweet-suggesting adj.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) ii. vi. 7 O sweet-suggesting Loue. View more context for this quotation
sweet-touched adj.
ΚΠ
c1602 C. Marlowe tr. Ovid Elegies iii. xi. sig. F2 Sweet toucht harp that to moue stones was able.
sweet-whispered adj.
ΚΠ
1843 G. P. R. James Forest Days II. x. 185 Many a sweet-whispered word was there, while all was laughter and merriment around.
b. With adjectives (chiefly poetic, denoting a combination of sweetness with some other quality). Combinations of this class were much favoured by Sylvester, who has sweet-charming , sweet-piercing, sweet-rapting, sweet-sacred, sweet-sweating, sweet-warbling.
sweet-bitter adj.
ΚΠ
1605 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. i. vi. 195 They doo discharge On others shoulders their sweet-bitter Charge.
1690 J. Dryden Amphitryon iii. 33 The stern Goddess of sweet-bitter Cares.
sweet-bright adj.
sweet-chaste adj.
ΚΠ
1598 R. Barnfield Remembrance Eng. Poets ii, in Encomion Lady Pecunia sig. E2v Daniell, praised for thy sweet-chast Verse.
sweet-familiar adj.
ΚΠ
1865 G. M. Hopkins Poems (1967) 21 New-dated from the terms that reappear, More sweet-familiar grows my love to thee.
sweet-sad adj.
ΚΠ
1946 A. Hutchings in A. L. Bacharach Brit. Music xvi. 200 Parts were Arthur Blissy, and none the worse for that; parts were sweet-sad and Englysshe.
1962 R. P. Jhabvala Get Ready for Battle ii. 97 There was music blaring out of various radios, sweet-sad music played at top volume.
sweet-savouring adj. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Ezek. xxvii. 19 Swete sauerynge spice.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 44 Sueit sairing flouris.
C4. Miscellaneous Special Combinations:
sweet-and-twenty n. a Shakespearean phrase (see twenty adj. 2), misunderstood by later writers to mean ‘a sweet girl of twenty years old’.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > young person > young woman > [noun]
daughterOE
maidenOE
young womanOE
mayc1175
burdc1225
maidc1275
wenchc1290
file1303
virginc1330
girla1375
damselc1380
young ladya1393
jilla1425
juvenclec1430
young person1438
domicellea1464
quean1488
trull1525
pulleta1533
Tib1533
kittyc1560
dell1567
gillian1573
nymph1584
winklota1586
frotion1587
yuffrouw1589
pigeon1592
tit1599
nannicock1600
muggle1608
gixy1611
infanta1611
dilla1627
tittiea1628
whimsy1631
ladykin1632
stammel1639
moggie1648
zitellaa1660
baggagea1668
miss1668
baby1684
burdie1718
demoiselle1720
queanie?1800
intombi1809
muchacha1811
jilt1816
titter1819
ragazza1827
gouge1828
craft1829
meisie1838
sheila1839
sixteenc1840
chica1843
femme1846
muffin1854
gel1857
quail1859
kitten1870
bud1880
fräulein1883
sub-debutante1887
sweet-and-twenty1887
flapper1888
jelly1889
queen1894
chick1899
pusher1902
bit of fluff1903
chicklet1905
twist and twirl1905
twist1906
head1913
sub-deb1916
tabby1916
mouse1917
tittie1918
chickie1919
wren1920
bim1922
nifty1923
quiff1923
wimp1923
bride1924
job1927
junior miss1927
hag1932
tab1932
sort1933
palone1934
brush1941
knitting1943
teenybopper1966
weeny-bopper1972
Valley Girl1982
a1616 W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night (1623) ii. iii. 50 Then come kisse me sweet and twentie . View more context for this quotation
1887 J. Ashby-Sterry Lazy Minstrel (1892) 76 I love the eyes of peerless blue, And nameless grace of Sweet-and-Twenty!
1901 G. K. Menzies Prov. Sk. (1902) 48 When one's special sweet-and-twenty Is enshrined in one's Canader on the Cher.
sweet-breasted adj. [see breast n. 5c] Obsolete sweet-voiced.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > singing > singing voice > [adjective] > qualities of voice > having voice of specific quality
well-voiced1634
sweet-breasteda1640
silvery1821
sweet-throat1870
a1640 F. Beaumont et al. Loves Cure iii. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. Rrrrr3/1 A proper man,..Sweet breasted, as the Nightingale, or Thrush.
sweet-lipped adj. (also sweet-lipt) having sweet lips; usually, speaking sweetly.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > mouth > [adjective] > lip or lips > types of
babber-lippedc1400
blab-lippedc1430
blabber-lipped1483
thick-lippeda1529
blobber-lipped1593
blub1603
red-lipped1605
rose-lippeda1616
blubbered1634
sweet-lippeda1644
labrous1656
blobber1670
blubber1677
blubber-lipped1690
red-mouthed1838
blubberous1863
semihiant1873
slobber1895
labrose1905
the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > [adjective] > having pleasing speech or eloquent
well-speakingOE
renablec1300
fair-speakinga1398
well-tonguedc1480
honey-mouthed1539
golden-mouthed1542
sweet-mouthed1542
fine-mouthed?1549
silver-tongued1592
silver1594
gold-mouthed1595
honey-tongued1595
nectar-tongued1596
tongue-gilt1608
feather-tongueda1618
chrysostomatical1623
dulciloquent1656
sweet-spoken1716
sweet-lipped1783
chrysostomic1816
smooth-spoken1821
superfluent1822
honey-lipped1833
nice spoken1852
articulate1892
a1644 F. Quarles Solomons Recantation (1645) Soliloquy viii. 43 And Candle-light devotion, trim'd and straw'd With sweet-lipt Roses.
1783 W. Gordon tr. Livy Rom. Hist. iii. lxviii The embellishments of a sweet-lipped tribune.
a1845 T. Hood Lamia v, in W. Jerdan Autobiogr. (1852) I. 273 Nay, sweet-lipp'd Silence, 'Tis now your turn to talk.
sweet-mouthed adj. /-maʊðd/ (a) fond of sweet-flavoured things, dainty; (b) speaking sweetly (usually ironically).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [adjective] > sweet-toothed
sweet-mouthed1542
sweet-toothed1615
the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > [adjective] > having pleasing speech or eloquent
well-speakingOE
renablec1300
fair-speakinga1398
well-tonguedc1480
honey-mouthed1539
golden-mouthed1542
sweet-mouthed1542
fine-mouthed?1549
silver-tongued1592
silver1594
gold-mouthed1595
honey-tongued1595
nectar-tongued1596
tongue-gilt1608
feather-tongueda1618
chrysostomatical1623
dulciloquent1656
sweet-spoken1716
sweet-lipped1783
chrysostomic1816
smooth-spoken1821
superfluent1822
honey-lipped1833
nice spoken1852
articulate1892
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > [adjective] > having (good) appetite > having appetite for specific kind of food
sweet-mouthed1542
sweeta1616
sweet-toothed1615
sugary1664
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 45 For that he was so sweete mouthed, and drouned in the voluptuousnesse of high fare.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Leschard, a lickorous, or sweet-mouthed slapsawce.
a1627 T. Middleton & W. Rowley Spanish Gipsie (1653) ii. sig. D This cherry-lip'd, sweet-mouth'd villaine.
a1722 E. Lisle Observ. Husbandry (1757) 409 Nuts, being so sweet, would make them so sweet-mouthed, that [etc.].
1886 J. F. Maurice in Lett. fr. Donegal Pref. p. vi The class which Mr. Parnell never speaks of except as the ‘felon’ landlords, just as his sweet-mouthed friends speak of The Times.
sweet-recording adj. [record v.1 3.] Obsolete singing sweetly, tuneful.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > [adjective] > melodious or harmonious
sweetc900
merryOE
softc1230
accordanta1325
well-soundingc1350
cordant1382
sootc1385
songfula1400
melodiousa1425
sugaredc1430
well-toneda1500
tunable1504
dulcea1513
equivalenta1513
consonant?1521
harmonicala1527
harmoniousc1550
consorteda1586
Orphean1593
concentful1595
melodical1596
sweet-recording1598
tuneful1598
sirenical1599
high-tuned1603
nightingale-like1611
soundful?1615
according1626
modulaminous1637
undiscording1645
canorous1646
symphonious1652
concinnous1654
consonous1654
harmonic1667
sirenica1704
symphonial1773
concentual1782
chantant1785
Memnonian1800
melodized1807
Orphic1817
undiscordant1819
concentuous1850
fluting1852
melodic1871
well-orchestrated1872
jarless1876
tuny1885
tunesome1890
1598 E. Ford Parismus iii. sig. C2v They heard the sound of most sweete recording Musicke, which made Dionisius wonder.
1601 R. Chester Loves Martyr 123 The sweet recording Swanne Apolloes ioy.
sweet-seasoned adj. ‘seasoned’ or imbued with sweetness.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > [adjective] > honeyed, mellifluous, or luscious
honeyfula1400
honeyed1435
mellifluous?a1475
sugarc1530
sweetful1589
sugary1591
honeysome1593
sweet-seasoned1609
sugar-candied1623
creamya1640
luscious1651
saccharine1841
mouth-watering1847
sugar-candyish1852
goluptious1856
yummy1899
1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets lxxv. sig. E4v So are you to my thoughts as food to life, Or as sweet season'd shewers are to the ground. View more context for this quotation
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. i. 9 A bitter pleasant tast, of a sweete-seasoned sowre.
sweet seventeen n. seventeen regarded as the characteristic age of prettiness and innocence in a girl; cf. sweet sixteen n. which is more common.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > young person > young woman > [noun] > state or quality of being
sweet seventeen1791
young ladyhood1843
young-womanhood1852
young ladyship1856
young ladyishness1867
damselhood1880
flapperhood1905
flapperdom1907
flapperism1909
1791 Misc. Prose & Verse 1 As fair a girl as could be seen, Was not a second less than sweet seventeen.
1855 Ld. Tennyson Brook in Maud & Other Poems 107 Claspt hands and that petitionary grace Of sweet seventeen subdued me ere she spoke.
sweet sixteen n. sixteen regarded as the characteristic age of prettiness and innocence in a girl; cf. sweet seventeen n. which is less common.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > young person > young woman > [adjective]
maidenly1530
maidenlike1548
maiden1594
young-ladylike1754
sweet sixteen1826
young ladyish1832
young-womanly1836
flapperish1920
teenybop1967
the mind > attention and judgement > attractiveness > [noun] > attractive person > woman > most attractive stage
sweet sixteen1826
1826 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 20 138/1 A bright-eyed, round-limbed virgin of sweet sixteen.
1898 J. Thornton (title of song) When you were sweet sixteen.
1977 Grimsby Evening Tel. 5 May 12/3 Unfortunately everybody can't be sweet 16 and there are many shops catering for the older woman.
sweet-spoken adj. speaking sweetly, using pleasant language (cf. plain-spoken adj.).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > [adjective] > having pleasing speech or eloquent
well-speakingOE
renablec1300
fair-speakinga1398
well-tonguedc1480
honey-mouthed1539
golden-mouthed1542
sweet-mouthed1542
fine-mouthed?1549
silver-tongued1592
silver1594
gold-mouthed1595
honey-tongued1595
nectar-tongued1596
tongue-gilt1608
feather-tongueda1618
chrysostomatical1623
dulciloquent1656
sweet-spoken1716
sweet-lipped1783
chrysostomic1816
smooth-spoken1821
superfluent1822
honey-lipped1833
nice spoken1852
articulate1892
1716 J. Addison Drummer iv. 34 You are such a sweet-spoken Man, it does one's Heart good to receive your Orders.
sweet-throated adj. sweet-voiced.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > quality of voice > [adjective] > pleasant > having pleasant voice
sweet-tongued1598
well-voiced1634
sweet-throated1887
1887 J. R. Lowell Credidimus in Atlantic Monthly Feb. 251 Who knows but from our loins may spring (Long hence) some winged sweet-throated thing.
1928 W. B. Yeats tr. Sophocles King Oedipus 5 What message of disaster from that sweet-throated Zeus?
sweet-tongued adj. /-tʌŋd/ having a sweet tongue or utterance, sweet-voiced, sweet-spoken.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > quality of voice > [adjective] > pleasant > having pleasant voice
sweet-tongued1598
well-voiced1634
sweet-throated1887
1598 J. Marston Certaine Satyres in Metamorph. Pigmalions Image 75 Sweet tongu'd Orpheus.
a1758 Ramsay in Evergreen Contents vii Sweit tungd Scot, quha sings the welcum hame.
1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. II. v. viii. 337 Beautiful sweet-tongued Female Citizens.
sweet-toothed adj. /-tuːθt/ having a ‘sweet tooth’, fond of sweet things or delicacies.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > [adjective] > sweet-toothed
sweet-mouthed1542
sweet-toothed1615
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > appetite > [adjective] > having (good) appetite > having appetite for specific kind of food
sweet-mouthed1542
sweeta1616
sweet-toothed1615
sugary1664
1615 G. Markham Eng. House-wife (1668) ii. ii. 51 She must not be butter-fingred, sweet-toothed, nor faint-hearted.
1682 G. Wheler Journey into Greece ii. 203 The Turks are very sweet-tooth'd and love all Kind of sweet Meats.
1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. at Slaik Our use of the word seems indeed to have been borrowed from the nasty habits of sweet-toothed cooks.
1975 Times 31 May 7/2 The puddings, often a weakness in French restaurants from a sweet-toothed British customer's point of view.

Draft additions December 2006

sweet bursaria n. a prickly Australian shrub, Bursaria spinosa (family Pittosporaceae), which has dense clusters of small, sweet-scented white flowers.
ΚΠ
1914 E. E. Pescott Native Flowers Victoria 33Sweet Bursaria’..is called in many localities the ‘Christmas Bush’.
1967 N. A. Wakefield Naturalist's Diary 32 Sweet Bursaria (Bursaria spinosa) was in full bloom with its dense pyramids of small white flowers.
2005 Weekly Times (Australia) (Nexis) 16 Feb. 37 Sweet bursaria is very prickly and has often been removed on farming land but it..may help keep cockchafers at bay.

Draft additions September 2008

sweet roll n. North American any of various types of sweet-tasting bread or pastry products, esp. a glazed or filled bun eaten for breakfast.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > bread > loaf > [noun] > other types of loaf
white loafeOE
barley loafc950
French loafc1350
pease loafc1390
penny loaf1418
jannock?a1500
household loaf1565
boon-loaf1679
farmhouse loaf1795
cottage loaf1829
potato loaf1831
sod1836
Coburg1843
sweet roll1851
stale1874
Hovis1890
Sally Lunn1901
bloomer loaf1937
wholemeal1957
baguette1958
1851 E. S. Wortley Trav. in U.S. II. v. 99 The jetty-locked Victoriana brings it in the morning for desayuno, with a most excellent sweet roll (an improvement on an English bun).
1948 Home Econ. Jrnl. Feb. 78/2 I chose menu 3 because a scrambled egg and bacon can do more for the body than a sweet roll and jelly.
2002 Backwoods Home Mag. Nov. 57/3 Use either biscuit dough or half-time spoon roll dough (with a little extra flour added so you can knead it) and make cinnamon sweet rolls or sticky buns.

Draft additions January 2009

sweet vermouth n. sweetened vermouth; cf. dry vermouth n. at dry adj. and adv. Additions, Italian vermouth n. at Italian adj. and n. Special uses 1.
ΚΠ
1929 Portsmouth (New Hampsh.) Herald 20 Dec. 16/4 (advt.) Italian Dry and Sweet Vermouth at Payne's.
2002 A. Phillips Prague iv. i. 290 A few drinks and a couple of dances later, immediately after she had crunched and swallowed an ice cube coated with the last remnants of her sweet vermouth, they were kissing.

Draft additions March 2014

the sweet science: (a) music, esp. regarded as technical skill which gives pleasure or enjoyment (cf. science n. 3a) (obsolete); (b) slang (also with capital initials) the sport of boxing, esp. regarded as a discipline requiring trained skill (cf. noble art n. at noble adj. and n.1 Compounds 2, noble science n. 2b). [In sense Additions (b), apparently after the following use, later popularized by U.S. journalist A. J. Liebling (compare quot. 1956):
1824 P. Egan Boxiana IV. 53 Sweet Science of Bruising! how often has man, Twice as strong as his fellow, presumed just to lark it.
]
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > boxing > [noun]
defence1549
pugilation1656
fencing1692
boxing1693
the (noble, also manly) art of self-defence1724
noble art1749
bruising1750
ring1770
noble science1778
pugilism1788
sparring1797
the sweet science1810
the fancy1820
pugilistics1820
pugnastics1830
fista1839
scrapping1891
ring-work1899
no contest1922
1810 Daughter II. xii. 171 Their musical parties were again renewed, as Lady Lionel was an enthusiast in the sweet science.
1874 Freeman's Jrnl. (Dublin) 20 Nov. 2/2 It does not follow because these and others cannot appreciate some features of the ‘sweet science’ in its later developments that they merit the sweeping imputation expressed by Lorenzo in the Merchant of Venice.
1895 G. M. Fenn Queen's Scarlet iii. 16 There were other signs about of the occupant's love of the sweet science; for there were a tuning-fork, a pitch-pipe, and a metronome on the chimney-piece.
1913 Times Lit. Supp. 20 Nov. 547/1 The ‘Sweet Science’... Mr. Lynch, a former captain of the Oxford University Boxing Club.., has written a treatise on the modern equivalent of ‘the sweet science of bruising’.
1913 Manitoba Free Press 27 Dec. (Literary section) 1/2 Being bullied by two strange boys, he tried to fight them—but without success, the two knowing too well some tricks of the ‘sweet science’.
1956 A. J. Liebling Sweet Sci. 11 When I came back from the war in 1945 I wasn't ready to write about the Sweet Science, although I continued to see fights.
2004 R. B. Parker Double Play (2005) iv. 30 There's fighting..and there's boxing. You could beat both these guys up in some alley someplace... But, you got no future in the sweet science.

Draft additions June 2018

sweet shrub n. chiefly U.S. any of various deciduous shrubs of the genus Calycanthus, the flowers of which have a sweet, spicy scent; cf. Calycanthus n.
ΚΠ
?1762 T. Lamboll Let. in J. Bartram Corr. (1992) 575 I send..what Shrubs could be got ready, vizt: Sweet Shrub; two Sorts Pink-Root (of wch the narrow leaf is the right Sort for Worms).
1863 Gardener's Monthly Feb. 34/1 The Sweet Shrub or Virginia Calycanthus, is one of the sweetest of all flowering shrubs; though its color is dull.
1925 Amer. Jrnl. Nursing 25 661/1 Soft bright green leaves are bursting and the air is heavy with the perfume of wild honeysuckles and sweet shrubs.
2011 W. C. Welch & G. Grant Heirloom Gardening 167 Calycanthus floridus. Sweet Shrub, Carolina Allspice, Strawberry Shrub, Sweet Bubby.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1919; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

sweetv.1

Etymology: < sweet adj.; in Old English swétan = Old High German suoȥen (Middle High German sueȥen).
Now rare.
1. transitive. To make sweet, sweeten.
a. literal (to the taste, smell, etc.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > taste and flavour > sweetness > sweeten [verb (transitive)]
sweetc1000
dulcorate?a1425
doucea1475
sugar1530
sweeten1552
condulcate1569
dulcerate?1586
nectarize1592
dulcify1599
asweeten1605
ensweeten1607
besugar1611
endulce1611
indulcate1628
besweeten1648
dulcescate1657
obdulcorate1657
edulcorate1661
the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > preparation for table or cooking > sweetening > sweeten [verb (transitive)]
sweetc1000
dulcorate?a1425
doucea1475
sweeten1552
nectarize1592
dulcify1599
asweeten1605
ensweeten1607
endulce1611
indulcate1628
dulcescate1657
obdulcorate1657
edulcorate1661
oversweeten1823
c1000 Sax. Leechd. III. 58 Nim þonne hunig be dæle & swet þone drænc.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 1649 Þe sallt. Þatt ure mete sweteþ.
c1440 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine v. 1959 It longeth to flowres swhiche lycoure for to swete.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 3v Hounger is the best sauce..Because the same bothe sweeteth all thynges, and also is a thyng of no coste ne charge.
1545 T. Raynald tr. E. Roesslin Byrth of Mankynde iii. sig. U.vii With fayre water fyrste soden and sweted with sugre.
1580 T. Newton Approoued Med. f. 24 The Nutmegge..stayeth vomittes, & sweeteth the Breathe.
1604 M. Drayton Owle sig. B2 Sweetning her nest, and purging it of Dong.
1622 G. Wither Faire-virtue sig. D5v The mornings dewie roses: That..Cast perfumes that sweet the Aire.
1765 Proc. Gen. Court Martial on Lieut. Gov. P. Thicknesse, etc. 49 It is the Lieutenant-Governor's Orders that the soldiers in Garrison sweet and clean the parade..twice a week.
1896 Godey's Mag. Feb. 173 When..pine-woods sweet the air.
b. figurative (to the mind, feelings, etc.).
ΚΠ
OE Cynewulf Juliana 525 He mec feran het, þeoden of þystrum, þæt ic þe sceolde synne swetan.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes Erasm. Pref. What thyng better sweetteth ye endityng of Marcus Tullius?
1597 N. Breton Auspicante Jehoua f. 25v Beeing clensed from my sinne..& sweeted in my soule, by the oile of thy grace.
1601 J. Marston et al. Iacke Drums Entertainm. ii. sig. C3 I haue a thankfull heart, Tho not a glorious speech to sweet my thankes.
1610 Bible (Douay) II. Ecclus. xxvii. 26 In the sight of thyne eyes he will sweete his mouth.
a1626 N. Breton in Daffodils & Primroses 14/2 in Wks. (1879) I Queene of suche powre As sweeteth euery sowre.
2. To affect in a sweet or pleasant way; to give pleasure to, delight, gratify.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > quality of being pleasant or pleasurable > please or give pleasure to [verb (transitive)]
i-quemec893
ywortheOE
queemeOE
likeOE
likeOE
paya1200
gamec1225
lustc1230
apaya1250
savoura1300
feastc1300
comfort1303
glew1303
pleasec1350
ticklec1386
feedc1400
agreea1413
agreec1425
emplessc1450
gree1468
applease1470
complaire1477
enjoy1485
warm1526
to claw the ears1549
content1552
pleasure1556
oblect?1567
relish1567
gratify1569
sweeta1575
promerit1582
tinkle1582
tastea1586
aggrate1590
gratulatea1592
greeta1592
grace1595
arride1600
complease1604
honey1604
agrade1611
oblectate1611
oblige1652
placentiate1694
flatter1695
to shine up to1882
fancy-
a1575 N. Harpsfield Treat. Divorce Henry VIII (1878) (modernized text) 292 To sweet the people's ears with pleasant words [he] told them [etc.].
1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iii. iii. sig. F2 Heauens tones Strike not such musick to immortall soules, As your accordance sweetes my breast withall.
1652 Liber Patris Sapientiæ in E. Ashmole Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum 196 In thyne owne howse thow maist well gett A good Morsell of meat thy mouth to sweet.
1879 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Jan. 58 [West Indian Negro] You will hear of something that will sweet you greatly.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1919; most recently modified version published online December 2019).

sweetv.2

Etymology: Echoic: compare sweet-sweet n.
Obsolete. rare.
intransitive. To pipe, chirp, or twitter, as a bird.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > sound or bird defined by > [verb (intransitive)] > chirp or twitter
chirmOE
chattera1250
janglea1300
jargon?a1366
chirkc1386
chirtc1386
chitterc1386
twittera1387
chirpc1440
yipc1440
channerc1480
quitter1513
chirrup1579
chipper1593
pip1598
gingreate1623
chita1639
sweet1677
shatter17..
swee-swee1839
weet-weet1845
cheet1855
tweet1856
twiddle1863
weet1866
1677 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation (ed. 2) iii. 57 When you have so tamed them [sc. captured nightingales] that they begin to Cur and Sweet with chearfulness.
1677 N. Cox Gentleman's Recreation (ed. 2) iii. 57 Those Birds that are long a feeding, and make no Curring nor Sweeting.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1919; most recently modified version published online March 2021).
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n.a1300adj.adv.c825v.1OEv.21677
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