Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Dixie
Dix′ie
(dĭks′y̆)
, p
rop.
Noun.
1.
A colloquial name for the Southern portion of the United States, esp. during the Civil War.
[U.S.]
Syn. – Dixieland, Dixie Land, the Confederacy, Confederate States of America, the South.
Syn. – .
Definition 2024
Dixie
Dixie
See also: dixie
English
Proper noun
Dixie
- (informal, US) The southern United States; the South.
- (informal, US) The southwestern corner of Utah.
- (US) A female given name transferred from the place name.
Synonyms
Derived terms
References
- "Dixie" in Michael Quinion, Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds, 2004.
- ↑ Funk, W. J., Word origins and their romantic stories, New York, Wilfred Funk, Inc.
dixie
dixie
See also: Dixie
English
Noun
dixie (plural dixies)
- (military) A large iron pot, used in the army.
- 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.
- 1917, Arthur Guy Empey, Over the Top: