dixie

See also: Dixie

English

Etymology

From Hindi देगची (degcī) or Bengali ডেগচি (ḍegci, cooking pot), both from Persian دیگ (dig, pot) + ـچه (diminutive suffix).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈdɪksi/

Noun

dixie (plural dixies)

  1. (military) A large iron pot, used in the army.
    • 1903, Minutes of Evidence Taken Before the Royal Commission on the War in South Africa, H.M. Stationery Office, 1903
      four men generally like to mess together, and one cooking pot among them takes the place of a mess-tin or "dixie"
    • 1917, Arthur Guy Empey, Over the Top:
      Then from the communication trenches came dixies or iron pots, filled with steaming tea, which had two wooden stakes through their handles, and were carried by two men.
    • 1928, Siegfried Sassoon, Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Penguin 2013, p. 261:
      And what those ‘dixies’ of hot tea signified no one knows who wasn't there to wait for them.
    • 1929, Frederic Manning, The Middle Parts of Fortune, Vintage 2014, p. 39:
      Army rum is potent stuff, especially when the supplies of tea and water have run out, and one drinks it neat out of a dixie.

Translations


Spanish

Noun

dixie m (plural dixies)

  1. dixie
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