cast-iron stomach

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

cast-iron stomach (plural cast-iron stomachs)

  1. (figuratively) A capacity to consume without difficulty quantities of alcohol, spicy food, spoiled food, or other food and drink that would normally cause indigestion.
    • 1863, Dio Lewis, Weak Lungs and how to Make Them Strong, page 75:
      An animal man, with a cast-iron stomach, or, perhaps quite as often a dyspeptic, with a suffering stomach and ruined health, will say, “don’t keep thinking about your food; it will give you the dyspepsia.
    • 1989 January, Texas Monthly, volume 17, number 1, page 125:
      I love to travel and to shop, and I've got a cast-iron stomach, so I gain about ten pounds every trip.
    • 2009, Norman Barasch, The Joy of Laughter: My Life as a Comedy Writer, page 104:
      Carroll, with his normally cast-iron stomach, began to complain of stomach pains.
    • 2011, Helen Evans, Reluctant Heroes, page 19:
      He must have a cast iron stomach too. He volunteered to finish off any spare sandwiches or apple cores or even orange peel, if there were any, going begging.