quenchcoal

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See also: quench-coal

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

quench +‎ coal

Noun[edit]

quenchcoal (countable and uncountable, plural quenchcoals)

  1. (obsolete, idiomatic, Puritanism) A person or thing that undermines religious zeal; hence a heartless, uncaring person with respect to religion.
    • 1615, Samuel Ward, A Coal from the Altar to Kindle the Holy Fire of Zeal:
      Zeal has in this our earthly mold little fuel and much quench-coal; it is hardly fired and soon cooled.
    • 1642, Daniel Rogers, Naaman the Syrian: His Disease and Cure, page 868:
      You are quenchcoal; no sparkle of grace can kindle upon your cold hearth.
    • 1817, “William Prynne”, in Athenae Oxonienses, volume 3, page 847:
      In 1636 he published two books at once, or immediately after each other. One of them was called The Quench Coal, in answer to that called A Coal from the Altar; against placing the Communion-Table Altarwise.