Barmecide feast

English

Etymology

From a tale in the Arabian Nights in which a rich man serves a beggar an imaginary banquet; see Barmecide.

Noun

Barmecide feast (plural Barmecide feasts)Category:English lemmas#BARMECIDEFEASTCategory:English nouns#BARMECIDEFEASTCategory:English countable nouns#BARMECIDEFEASTCategory:English multiword terms#BARMECIDEFEASTCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#BARMECIDEFEASTCategory:Pages with entries#BARMECIDE%20FEASTCategory:Pages with 1 entry#BARMECIDE%20FEAST

  1. A meal with very little or no food
    • 1915, P.G. Wodehouse, chapter 8, in Something Fresh, London: Hutchinson, page 122:
      [H]e decided that his loved one was on the point of starvation. No human being, he held, could exist on such Barmecide feasts.
      Category:English terms with quotations#BARMECIDEFEAST
    • 1935, Milton H Stansbury, “The Surrealists”, in French Novelists of Today, University of Pennsylvania Press, pages 121-136:
      Arthur Rimbaud, in a hotel dining room where, though indulging in a Barmecide feast before empty plates and glasses, he evinces the most evident signs of gastronomic enjoyment.
      Category:English terms with quotations#BARMECIDEFEAST
  2. Something that promises much but delivers nothing; an illusion.
Category:English countable nouns Category:English lemmas Category:English multiword terms Category:English nouns Category:English terms with quotations Category:Pages with 1 entry Category:Pages with entries