dimidium dimidiumque

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English

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Etymology

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Humorously Latinized version of "half and half", once used by students.

Noun

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dimidium dimidiumque (uncountable)

  1. (UK, slang, obsolete, humorous) half and half (mixture of ale and porter, or similar)
    • 1848, Albert Smith, Angus Bethune Reach, The Man in the Moon, volume 3, page 107:
      And when the young Anglo-Roma Gents went out between the acts, in order to imbibe dimidium dimidiumque, or gingiber, (doubtless the ginger-beer of the moderns,) they received at the theatre door []
    • 1893, Charles Thomas Paske, Frederick George Aflalo, Myamma: A Retrospect of Life and Travel in Lower Burmah, page 153:
      I was still fresh, which was something; a trifle warm perhaps, and well disposed towards a pint of the dimidium dimidiumque of the ancients had such been available, but, in default of nectar, I sought another comforter, []

References

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  • John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary