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January 29, 2020

Word of the Day: Eighty-six

1 CQ

Word of the Day : April 20, 2017

eighty-six \ay-tee-SIKS\ verb

Definition

: (slang) to refuse to serve (a customer); also : to get rid of : throw out

Examples

The bar's policy is that bartenders have both the authority and responsibility to eighty-six customers who disrupt other patrons.

"He eighty-sixed the last reform once he was safely re-elected, saying he wanted to give municipalities more time to get ready for the change." — Brian O'Neill, The Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) Post-Gazette, 14 June 2007

Did You Know?

If you work in a restaurant or bar, you might eighty-six (or "eliminate") a menu item when you run out of it, or you might eighty-six (or "cut off") a customer who should no longer be served. Eighty-six is still used in this specific context, but it has also entered the general language. These days, you don't have to be a worker in a restaurant or bar to eighty-six something—you just have to be someone with something to get rid of or discard. There are many popular but unsubstantiated theories about the origin of eighty-six. The explanation judged most probable by Merriam-Webster etymologists is that the word was created as a rhyming slang word for nix, which means "to veto" or "to reject."

Aired April 20, 2017

All Merriam-Webster content is available at www.merriam-webster.com

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2 Comments
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Cherie P
86'd comes from the old west. If you got out of hand at the saloons, the bartender would cut you down to 86 proof liqueur, instead of the 101 proof served normally.
Julianne R
Thanks for the info
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