"It has become quite a common proverb that in wine there is truth," wrote the 1st-century A.D. Roman scholar, Pliny the Elder. The truth about the word wine is that it goes back to Latin vinum, but it is also a distant relative of the Greek word for wine, which is oinos. Indeed, Latin borrowed from the Greek to create a combining form that means "wine," oeno-. Modern French speakers combined oeno- with -phile (Greek for "lover of") to create oenophile before we adopted it from them in the mid-1800s. Oenophiles are sure to know oenology (now more often spelled enology) as the science of wine making and oenologist (now more often enologist) for one versed in oenology.
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This coastal community caters to oenophiles, gourmands, and art-lovers with its exceptional Shiraz and Grenache, grown in ancient soils.—
Brad Japhe,
Forbes.com,
1 July 2026 The wines are shaped by Pritchard Hill’s volcanic soils and high-elevation vineyards, yielding the rich, structured reds that have made Pritchard Hill a favorite among oenophiles.—
Abby Montanez,
Robb Report,
9 June 2026 But across the over 700 wineries in the Willamette Valley American Viticultural Area, oenophiles can also find chardonnay, riesling, syrah, and pinot gris.—
Zoe Baillargeon,
Travel + Leisure,
19 May 2026 Apiri recently expanded with an adjacent wine-tasting and events space, Ferment Artisan Lab, where oenophiles can get to know the island’s limestone-rich elevations through a taste of some of the best local producers.—
Shannon McMahon,
Condé Nast Traveler,
1 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for oenophile
Word History
Etymology
French œnophile, from œno- (from Greek oinos wine) + -phile -phile — more at wine