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1 juice
[‹u:s]1) (the liquid part of fruits or vegetables: She squeezed the juice out of the orange; tomato juice.) (ávaxta)safi2) ((often in plural) the fluid contained in meat: Roasting meat in tin foil helps to preserve the juices.) safi3) ((in plural) fluid contained in the organs of the body, eg to help digestion: digestive/gastric juices.) meltingarsafi•- juicy- juiciness -
2 lemon
['lemən]noun, adjective1) ((of) a type of oval, juicy, citrus fruit with pale yellow skin and very sour juice: She added the juice of a lemon to the pudding; a lemon drink.) sítróna2) ((of) the colour of this fruit: a pale lemon dress.) sítrónugulur•- lemonade- lemon grass -
3 alcohol
['ælkəhol] 1. noun(liquid made by the fermentation or distillation of sugar, present in intoxicating drinks, used also as a fuel, and in thermometers: I never drink alcohol - I drink orange juice.) alkóhól, vínandi2. noun(a person who suffers from a dependence on alcohol.) áfengissjúklingur, alkóhólisti -
4 carton
(a cardboard or plastic container: orange juice sold in cartons.) kassi, askja, (mjólkurhyrna, ferna -
5 concentrated
adjective ((of a liquid etc) made stronger; not diluted: concentrated orange juice.) þéttur, vatnstæmdur, óblandaður -
6 cordial
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7 dilute
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8 ferment
1. [fə'ment] verb1) (to (make something) go through a particular chemical change (as when yeast is added to dough in the making of bread): Grape juice must be fermented before it becomes wine.) gerja(st)2) (to excite or be excited: He is the kind of person to ferment trouble.) æsa(st)2. ['fə:ment] noun(a state of excitement: The whole city was in a ferment.) uppnám -
9 gallons (of)
((loosely) a large amount (of something liquid): The children drank gallons of orange juice.) mikið magn -
10 gallons (of)
((loosely) a large amount (of something liquid): The children drank gallons of orange juice.) mikið magn -
11 glucose
['ɡlu:kous](a kind of sugar found in the juice of fruit.) glúkósi -
12 gum
I noun((usually in plural) the firm flesh in which the teeth grow.) tannhold- gumboilII 1. noun1) (a sticky juice got from some trees and plants.) trjákvoða2) (a glue: We can stick these pictures into the book with gum.) lím3) (a type of sweet: a fruit gum.) hlaup4) (chewing-gum: He chews gum when he is working.) tyggigúmmí2. verb(to glue with gum: I'll gum this bit on to the other one.) líma- gummy- gumminess -
13 jelly
['‹eli]plural - jellies; noun1) (the juice of fruit boiled with sugar until it is firm, used like jam, or served with meat.) (ávaxta)hlaup2) (a transparent, smooth food, usually fruit-flavoured: I've made raspberry jelly for the party.) hlaup3) (any jelly-like substance: Frogs' eggs are enclosed in a kind of jelly.) hlaup4) ((American) same as jam I.)• -
14 latex
['leiteks](the milky juice of some plants especially rubber trees.) mjólkursafi -
15 opium
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16 orange
['orin‹] 1. noun1) (a type of juicy citrus fruit with a thick reddish-yellow skin: I'd like an orange; ( also adjective) an orange tree.) appelsína2) (the colour of this fruit.) appelsínugulur2. adjective1) (of the colour orange: an orange dress.) appelsínugulur2) (with the taste of orange juice: an orange drink.) appelsínu- -
17 press
[pres] 1. verb1) (to use a pushing motion (against): Press the bell twice!; The children pressed close to their mother.) þrÿsta á2) (to squeeze; to flatten: The grapes are pressed to extract the juice.) kreista3) (to urge or hurry: He pressed her to enter the competition.) hvetja; reka á eftir4) (to insist on: The printers are pressing their claim for higher pay.) þrÿsta á, halda fast fram5) (to iron: Your trousers need to be pressed.) pressa2. noun1) (an act of pressing: He gave her hand a press; You had better give your shirt a press.) þrÿstingur2) ((also printing-press) a printing machine.) prentvél3) (newspapers in general: It was reported in the press; ( also adjective) a press photographer.) pressan, blöðin4) (the people who work on newspapers and magazines; journalists: The press is/are always interested in the private lives of famous people.) blaðamenn5) (a device or machine for pressing: a wine-press; a flower-press.) -pressa•- pressing- press conference
- press-cutting
- be hard pressed
- be pressed for
- press for
- press forward/on -
18 rubber
1) (( also adjective) (of) a strong elastic substance made from the juice of certain plants (especially the rubber tree), or an artificial substitute for this: Tyres are made of rubber; rubber boots.) gúmmí2) ((also eraser) a piece of rubber used to rub out pencil etc marks: a pencil, a ruler and a rubber.) strokleður3) ((slang) a condom.)4) (a rubber band.)•- rubbery- rubber band
- rubber stamp -
19 sour
1. adjective1) (having a taste or smell similar in nature to that of lemon juice or vinegar: Unripe apples are/taste very sour.) súr2) (having a similar taste as a stage in going bad: sour milk.) súr3) ((of a person, his character etc) discontented, bad-tempered or disagreeable: She was looking very sour this morning.) fÿldur, úrillur2. verb(to make or become sour.) sÿra; gera súran- sourly- sourness -
20 squash
[skwoʃ] 1. verb1) (to press, squeeze or crush: He tried to squash too many clothes into his case; The tomatoes got squashed (flat) at the bottom of the shopping-bag.) troða; kremja2) (to defeat (a rebellion etc).) berja/bæla niður2. noun1) (a state of being squashed or crowded: There was a great squash in the doorway.) kássa, þvaga2) ((a particular flavour of) a drink containing the juice of crushed fruit: Have some orange squash!) ávaxtasafi3) ((also squash rackets) a type of game played in a walled court with rackets and a rubber ball.) skvass (veggtennis)4) (a vegetable or plant of the gourd family.)•- squashy
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См. также в других словарях:
Juice — (j[=u]s), n. [OE. juse, F. jus broth, gravy, juice, L. jus; akin to Skr. y[=u]sha.] The characteristic fluid of any vegetable or animal substance; the sap or part which can be expressed from fruit, etc.; the fluid part which separates from meat… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Juice — 〈[ dʒu:s] m. od. n.; s, s [ sız]〉 roher Obst od. Gemüsesaft [engl.] * * * Juice [d̮ʒu:s ], der (österr. nur so) od. das; , s […sɪs] [engl. juice < frz. jus = Saft, Brühe < lat. ius, ↑ 2Jus] (bes. österr.): [exotischer] Obst , Gemüsesaft. *… … Universal-Lexikon
juice — [jo͞os] n. [ME juis < OFr jus < L, broth, juice < IE * yūs < base * yeu , to mix > Gr zyme, leaven] 1. a) the liquid part of a plant, fruit, or vegetable b) the liquid part of a fruit or vegetable, used as a beverage [tomato juice] … English World dictionary
Juice — (engl. Fruchtsaft) steht für Lime Juice Cordial, ein gesüßtes Limettenkonzentrat Juice Podcast Receiver, ein Podcast Downloader Juice (Magazin), Hip Hop Magazin Juice (Film), US Film von Ernest Dickerson (1992) … Deutsch Wikipedia
JUICE — is a widely used non commercial software package for editing and analysing phytosociological data.It was developed at the Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic in 1998, and is fully described in English manual. It makes use of the previously … Wikipedia
juice — s.n. Suc de fructe; p. gener. băutură răcoritoare. [pr.: giús] – cuv. engl. Trimis de cata, 14.03.2002. Sursa: DEX 98 JUICE [pr.: giús] n. Suc de portocale, grepfrut etc. /cuv. engl … Dicționar Român
juice — ► NOUN 1) the liquid present in fruit or vegetables. 2) a drink made from this liquid. 3) (juices) fluid secreted by the stomach. 4) (juices) liquid coming from meat or other food in cooking. 5) informal electrical energy. 6) … English terms dictionary
juice — juice·less; juice; ver·juice; … English syllables
Juice — (j[=u]s), v. t. To moisten; to wet. [Obs.] Fuller. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Juice — [dʒu:s] der od. das; , s [...sis, auch ...siz] <aus gleichbed. engl. juice, dies über fr. jus »Saft, Brühe« aus gleichbed. lat. ius, vgl. 2↑Jus> Obst od. Gemüsesaft … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
Juice — Juice,derod.das:⇨Fruchtsaft … Das Wörterbuch der Synonyme