Stemwinder
[STEM-WIYN-dər]
Part of speech: noun
Origin: American English, 18th century
1.
(Informal) An entertaining and rousing speech.
2.
(Dated) A watch wound by turning a knob on the end of a stem.
Examples of Stemwinder in a sentence
"The candidate delivered a stemwinder so powerful, her lead rose in the polls the next day."
"The coach gave a half-time stemwinder that revived the team's energy and confidence to pull out a win."
About Stemwinder
“Stemwinder” was formed within English to describe expensive watches whose winding mechanism was atop a stem.
Did you Know?
“Stemwinder” refers to a mostly forgotten technology: stem-wind watches, which were high-end timepieces when they were invented in the 1840s. From this notion of luxury items powered by winding came the modern term “stemwinder,” referring to a top-notch speech with the power to wind up its listeners. A stemwinder no longer has anything to do with watches — though some have mistakenly used the term to mean a speech so long that those in the crowd might begin to wind their watches out of boredom. During the course of a real stemwinder, however, nobody has time to fiddle with their watch — they’re too busy being wound up by invigorating oratory.