BYOB

BYOB or BYO is an acronym most commonly meant to stand for "bring your own bottle", "bring your own booze" "bring your own bucket" or "bring your own beer".

BYOB is often placed on an invitation to indicate that the host will not be providing alcohol and that guests are welcome to bring their own. Some business establishments may allow patrons to bring their own bottle, subject to fees or membership conditions.

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Etymology

The term is cited by some online sources to have been used first in the early 1970s to mean "bring your own bottle", although in present day it is just as likely to mean "bring your own booze/beer".[1]

Corkage

Some establishments which sell alcoholic beverages for on site consumption, such as bars or restaurants, may also allow patrons to bring their own alcohol purchased from elsewhere. That alcohol is usually subject to an opening fee. Often the rule is limited to bottles of wine, where the fee is known as a corking fee.[2] Such policies are greatly regulated by local liquor control laws and licensing restrictions.[3]

Bottle club

As an alternative to the traditional full-service liquor license, some jurisdictions offer a similar license known as a bottle club license. It allows the business establishment to serve alcohol on the premises, but only if patrons brought the alcohol from elsewhere. The license generally prohibits the business from selling its own stock of alcoholic beverages. The license may require that patrons be members of the establishment. Such licenses may be preferred in situations where fees or zoning conditions imposed by a full-service liquor license are unwanted or impractical. They may also be the only license available, as some jurisdictions impose full-service liquor license quotas or business class restrictions.

Regional variations

In Australia and New Zealand, the term "BYO" (Bring Your Own) emerged to describe business establishments that offered corkage. It is believed that restaurants in Melbourne, in the state of Victoria, were advertising as "BYO" establishments by the 1960s with the concept becoming popular in New Zealand in the late 1970s.

Alternative meanings

It may also refer to Build Your Own Blocks, an advanced offshoot of the MIT Scratch programming language developed at UC Berkeley.[4]

References

  1. ^ "BYOB - Definitions from Dictionary.com". http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/BYOB. Retrieved 2006-12-11. 
  2. ^ J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pg 117 & 200 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0198609906
  3. ^ http://www.abc.state.ny.us/bring-your-own-bottle-byob
  4. ^ "BYOB - "Build Your Own Blocks" programming language at UC Berkeley". http://byob.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 2010-04-28. 

External links