gin blossom

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

gin blossom (plural gin blossoms)

  1. (slang) Vascular rosacea caused or exacerbated by excessive consumption of alcohol.
    • 1993 November, “Naked City”, in Spy, page 26:
      "Red Monkey": a Hundi slur, originally an allusion to the gin-blossom-encrusted faces of British colonial administrators
    • 2010, Jeania Kimbrough, Van Diemen at 17, page 241:
      One man had a gin blossom nose and a huge gut, another piercing blue eyes set off by deep-set wrinkles.
    • 2019, Adam Dolgins, The Big Book of Rock & Roll Names, page 1994:
      What a gin blossom is literally — what it symbolizes, I suppose, is loss of control.
    • 2019, Laini Giles, Bathing Beauty:
      That bohunk bastard has the biggest gin blossom I've ever seen.
    • 2021, Ed Tarkington, The Fortunate Ones:
      Sunny couldn't possibly have thought my mother would be better off staying at Café Divorcée with nothing to show for it but gray roots and a gin blossom.
  2. A female alcoholic.
    • 2003, Steven H. Propp, Beyond Heaven and Earth, page 600:
      She was an alcoholic old biddy, a "gin blossom”, who was venturing out on the streets past 10:00 PM alone because she had to get another bottle, to hold her over until morning, when she would probably go and get another bottle.
    • 2014, Suzanne Hayes, Loretta Nyhan, Empire Girls, page 159:
      Now, what do you say, my little gin blossom?
    • 2015, Michael Januska, Border City Blues 2-Book Bundle: Riverside Drive / Maiden Lane:
      Vera Maude had seen him in photos, the sweet little gin blossom standing next to the droopy old sourpuss.
  3. A cocktail composed of gin and fruit juice (usually peach, apricot, orange, and/or lime).
    • 1961, Charles Beardsley, The Naked Hills: Some Tales of Afghanistan, page 212:
      Hastily she poured another gin blossom.
    • 2005, Steven F. Hayward, Greatness:
      Reagan, perhaps because of his father's severe alcoholism, was not much of drinker, preferring a weak gin blossom at the White House when the occasion called for coctails.
    • 2013, Ace Atkins, Devil's Garden:
      He pressed a gin blossom in Virginia's hand as she sat in a green chair, crossed her legs, and dialed the house phone.
    • 2018, Melanie Benjamin, The Girls in the Picture:
      If mother could see me now, I grinned as I sipped a gin blossom from a teacup and watched Mabel shake her pert little derriere to the accompaniment of a ukulele pounding out “When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam'.”
  4. A metaphoric flower associated with heavy drinking.
    • 1869, Jenny's Geranium, page 64:
      "Well, I suppose you want a drop of gin for that thing?" she said. "Hand it over; I am very fond of flowers." "Specially gin blossoms," said the costermonger, in a rather loud whisper.
    • 1934, Mark Hellinger, The Ten Million:
      In the case of Mrs. Mollie Carroll and Randy Thomas, the flower of romance was a gin blossom.
    • 2003, Ian Philips, Satyriasis: Literotica 2, page 94:
      Instead, the City of Angels, that ever-metastasizing concrete gin blossom of on-ramps and off-ramps built over prehistoric tar pits, deflowered her.
    • 2010, Michael Kun, Corrections to my Memoirs:
      In 2003, the World Literature Forum was held in Budapest, Germany, a lovely, romantic seaside city that is perfectly suited for such a gathering, particularly in the spring with the gin blossoms are in full bloom.