potboy
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Noun
potboy (plural potboys)
- A boy employed in a plant nursery to tap clay pots with a stick for their ringing sound, indicating whether the plant required watering.
- GC&HTJ 1985 volume 198 page 17
- A boy employed as waiter to serve (pots of) drinks, as in a tavern.
- 2012, Stephen King, 11/22/63, page 782:
- I put on my kitchen potboy disguise and rode down to B-1 in an elevator that smelled like chicken soup, barbecue sauce, and Jack Daniel's.
- (British) A boy or man employed in a public house to collect empty pots or glasses.
- 1837, “Boz” [pseudonym; Charles Dickens], Sketches by Boz: Illustrative of Every-day Life, and Every-day People. The Second Series, London: John Macrone, […], →OCLC, chapter SEVEN DIALS, page 149:
- (“Hoo-roa,” ejaculates a pot-boy in a parenthesis, “put the kye-bosh on her, Mary.”)
Related terms
See also
References
- “potboy” in Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary: Based on Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, 7th edition, Springfield, Mass.: G[eorge] & C[harles] Merriam, 1963 (1967 printing), →OCLC.