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Falernum (n.)

Carribean liqueur made from rum, lime juice and sugar, by 1842, a word of uncertain etymology. An unlikely story is that it is a corruption of the phrase "You have to learn them." OED has no entry for this word but mentions a "chiefly poetical" type of ancient wine called Falerne or Falernum (in this sense, mid-15c.), documented by Pliny, which perhaps could have suggested the name; an 1806 account of a visit to a Guiana sugar plantation mentions the serving of "Falernum wine."

Falernum or drink of contradictions — Falernum is made in the same manner and contains the same ingredients, in the same proportions, as shrub; with the addition of four gallons of water to every three gallons of rum. Proportions are thus — one, two, three, and four.
 Of lime juice  one, to make it sour;
 Of sugar  two, to make it sweet;
 Three of rum, to make it strong;
 Of water  four, to make it weak.
[Robert Duff, " British Guiana," 1866]
also from 1842
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Trends of Falernum

updated on March 04, 2024

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