one's cup of tea. Ancient Japanese ceremony gives new meaning to a cup of tea
Elegance and flavor breathe new life into a traditional Japanese drink.
TOKYO -- What do the words "Japanese green tea" call to mind? The tea ceremony, with its elaborate rules for serving and sipping, perhaps? Or the bott
one's cup of tea MEDITATION FOR REAL LIFE
How to be Mindful With a Cup of CoffeeBy DAVID GELLES
Take a mindful moment with your morning cup o’ joe.
cup of joe
Alternative forms[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Of uncertain origin.
- Possibly a shortening of "cup of jamoke", from java + mocha: this origin was given in a military officer's manual from 1931, around when the term first appeared.[1]
- Alternatively, perhaps a use of joe (“fellow, guy”), signifying that coffee was the drink of the common man.
- Another theory suggests that US soldiers in World War I (1914-1918) referred to a serving of instant coffee made by the G. Washington Coffee Refining Company (founded in 1910) as a "cup of George", and that the common abbreviation of the name "George" ("Geo.") was then read as "Joe".[2]
- Another theory derives the term from Josephus Daniels (1862-1948), the Secretary of the U.S. Navy who abolished the officers' wine mess and thus made coffee the strongest drink available on ships. Snopes considers this is unlikely because it says there is no attestation of the phrase "cup of joe" until 1930, 16 years after the 1914 order banning the wine mess.[3] Confusingly, some other sources consider the Daniels derivation unlikely for the opposite reason: they say "cup of joe" predates the order.[4][5]
- (chiefly US, idiomatic) A cup of coffee. [quotations ▼]
- (figuratively) One’s personal preference.
Synonyms[edit]
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