Stem-winder

noun

noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    A watch that is wound up by turning a small knob on a stem which holds a gear winding the mainspring.
  2. 2
    a watch that is wound by turning a knob at the stem wordnet
  3. 3
    A rousing speech, especially by a politician. US
  4. 4
    Someone who gives such speeches; a great orator. US
  5. 5
    A boring, interminable speech. US, proscribed

    "Or – heaven forbid – the Bill Clinton of 1988, who gave a tedious stemwinder in 1988 that has gone down in the books as the worst nominating speech in recent memory?"

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  1. 6
    Something top-notch or first-rate. US, obsolete

Example

More examples

"Or – heaven forbid – the Bill Clinton of 1988, who gave a tedious stemwinder in 1988 that has gone down in the books as the worst nominating speech in recent memory?"

Etymology

US, mid-late 19th century, originally referring to then-recent stem-wind watches (invented in 1840s, commercialized initially 1850s by Patek Philippe & Co.). These were expensive, top-notch watches, hence generalized (1892) to “top-notch”, particularly applied to speeches, or to the orator in question. Non-speech senses later fell out of use. Nuance of “rousing” speech possibly by analogy with watch being wound up (“tighten by winding, excite, rouse”). Circa 2000, later sense of “interminable speech” a folk etymology, in sense “a speech that lasts so long one must wind one’s watch”.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.