soberer
English
Etymology
From sober + -er (comparative suffix) or + -er (agent noun suffix).
Noun
soberer (plural soberers)
- Something that makes a person sober.
- 1901, R. B. Cunninghame Graham, chapter 10, in A Vanished Arcadia: Being Some Account of the Jesuits in Paraguay, 1607 to 1767, London: Heinemann, page 278:
- […] business, as we know, is the great soberer of theorists, no matter on what side they theorize.
- 1914, Robert W. Service, The Pretender: A Story of the Latin Quarter, New York: A.L. Burt, Book 2, Chapter 1, p. 103:
- […] love is an intoxicant, marriage the most effective of soberers.
- 1923, Herbert Vivian, chapter 8, in Myself Not Least, Being the Personal Reminiscences of X, New York: H. Holt, page 136:
- One evening I stayed with him very late to celebrate the birthday of his favorite actress, and for once he was slightly the worse for liquor. […] We drove off together, arranging that I should drop him at his flat and drive on to my house. When we reached Haymarket I suggested that we should stop at one of the all-night chemists and buy him one of the mixtures known as “soberers.”
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