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vino

1

[ vee-noh ]

noun

, Informal.
, plural vi·nos.
  1. wine; specifically, red Italian wine, as chianti.


vino-

2
  1. variant of vini-.

vino

/ ˈviːnəʊ /

noun

  1. an informal word for wine


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Word History and Origins

Origin of vino1

1895–1900; < Italian: wine

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Word History and Origins

Origin of vino1

jocular use of Italian or Spanish vino

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Example Sentences

I found it beckoning, almost like a mirage, in the form of the Vino Volo wine bar.

The hotel is home to two restaurants, La Coronela and Santo Vino Bistro, and even makes its own Hotel California Tequila.

“He is a hated man in Montalcino,” Franco Zillani, who has chronicled the case on his blog Vino al Vino told The Daily Beast.

The bottles in which Vino Regalis was sold had yards of gold foil wrapped round their necks.

After the first greetings they pointed to their father and then to my house, saying "Vino," and making the sign of drinking.

In Italy the vino d'Asti is excellent, but this is still better.

In vino veritas, said Roman philosophy, and builded better than it knew.

The Mexicans call it “vino divino;” but, admirable as may be its qualities, it needs to be very temperately used.

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Vinnytsiavino de pasto