Dictionary Home » Phrase Meanings » Dutch courage

What does "Dutch courage" mean?

False courage acquired by drinking liquor, as in He had a quick drink to give him Dutch courage. This idiom alludes to the reputed heavy drinking of the Dutch, and was first referred to in Edmund Waller's Instructions to a Painter (1665): “The Dutch their wine, and all their brandy lose, Disarm'd of that from which their courage grows.”

Learn more about Dutch courage

link/cite print suggestion box