alcopop
English
editEtymology
editBlend of alcohol + pop (“sweetened carbonated drink”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editalcopop (usually uncountable, plural alcopops)
- (British, Ireland, Australia) An alcoholic drink that looks and tastes like a soft drink.
- 1999, Stanton Peel, Marcus Grant, editors, Alcohol and Pleasure: a health perspective:
- However, the media soon went too far in playing the story up, claiming that underage drinkers drank only alcopop (actually they preferred cheap cider).
- 2003 January 23, Dave Haslam, London Review of Books:
- The breweries began to develop alcopops with names and advertising drawn from drug culture.
- 2004 June 3, Andrew O'Hagan, London Review of Books:
- Over on cheap flights from Prestwick and Stansted, these boys were often to be found floating trouserless in the Liffey at dawn, or staggering up Grafton Street, their T-shirts clinging to them with alcopops and spilled Sambuca.
Translations
edittype of alcoholic drink
See also
edit- premix (Australia)
- cooler (Canada)
- malternative