on the wagon

短语

戒酒

发音

UK
AU

别名

on the water wagon

释义与例句

phr.
  1. 1.

    Abstaining from drinking any alcoholic drink, usually in the sense of having given it up (as opposed to never having partaken); teetotal.

    习语

    "Sit down, bo," invited Soup Face. "I guess you're a regular all right. Here, have a snifter?" and he pulled a flask from his side pocket, holding it toward The Oskaloosa Kid. / "Thank you, but;—er—I'm on the wagon, you know," declined the youth.

  2. 2.

    Maintaining a program of self-improvement or abstinence from some other undesirable habit.

    引申义

    He’s been on the smoking cessation wagon for two weeks now.

  3. 3.

    Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see on, the, wagon.

词源

Originally on the water wagon or on the water cart, referring to carts used to hose down dusty roads: see the 1901 quotation below. The suggestion is that a person who is “on the wagon” is drinking water rather than alcoholic beverages. The term may have been used by the early 20th-century temperance movement in the United States; for instance, William Hamilton Anderson (1874 – c. 1959), the superintendent of the New York Anti-Saloon League, is said to have made the following remark about Prohibition: “Be a good sport about it. No more falling off the water wagon. Uncle Sam will help you keep your pledge.”

来源:wiktionary