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1. (n.) juice
the natural fluid that can be extracted from a plant, esp. a fruit:
orange juice.
2. juice
the liquid part of a plant or animal substance.
3. juice
the natural fluids of an animal body:
gastric juices.
4. juice
any extracted liquid.
5. juice
essence; spirit.
6. juice
strength or vitality.
7. juice
Slang.
8. juice
electricity.
9. juice
gasoline or fuel oil.
10. juice
Slang. alcoholic liquor.
11. juice
Slang.
12. juice
money obtained by extortion.
13. juice
money loaned at exorbitant interest rates.
14. juice
the interest rate itself.
15. juice
Slang.
16. juice
influence; power.
17. juice
Informal. gossip or scandal.
18. (v.t.) juice
to extract juice from.
19. (v.i.) juice
juice up,
20. juice
to add power, energy, or speed to; strengthen.
21. juice
to add excitement to.
Etymology: (1250–1300; ME ju(i)s < OF jus < L jūs broth, sauce, juice)
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| Definition of 'Juice' |
Princeton's WordNet |
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1. (noun) juice
the liquid part that can be extracted from plant or animal tissue by squeezing or cooking
2. (noun) juice
energetic vitality
"her creative juices were flowing"
3. (noun) juice
electric current
"when the wiring was finished they turned on the juice"
4. (noun) juice, succus
any of several liquids of the body
"digestive juices"
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1. (noun) juice
the liquid from a fruit or vegetable, or a drink made from this liquid
a glass of orange/tomato juice; Mix in the juice of one lemon.
2. juice
the liquid from cooked meat
Use the juices to make gravy.
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| Definition of 'Juice' |
Webster Dictionary |
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1. (noun) Juice
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 in cooking
2. (verb) Juice
to moisten; to wet
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| Definitions of 'Juice' |
The New Hacker's Dictionary |
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1. Juice
The weight of a given node in some sort of graph (like a web of
trust or a relevance-weighted search query). This appears to have been
generalized from google juice, but may derive from
black urban slang for power or a respect. Example: “I
signed your key, but I really don't have the juice to be
authoritative.”
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Sense: the liquid part of fruits or vegetables
She squeezed the juice out of the orange; tomato juice.
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Afrikaans: sap, vog |
Arabic: عُصارَه، عَصير |
Bulgarian: сок |
Brazilian: suco |
Czech: šťáva |
German: der Saft |
Danish: juice; -juice; saft; -saf |
Greek: χυμός |
Spanish: zumo |
Estonian: mahl |
Farsi: آب سبزی یا میوه |
Finnish: mehu |
French: jus |
Hebrew: מיץ |
Hindi: रस |
Croatian: sok |
Hungarian: gyümölcslé, dzúsz |
Indonesian: sari buah atau sayuran |
Icelandic: (ávaxta)safi |
Italian: succo |
Japanese: 果汁 |
Korean: (과일, 채소, 고기 등의)즙, 주스 |
Lithuanian: sultys |
Latvian: sula |
Malay: air perahan; jus |
Dutch: sap |
Norwegian: jus, saft,–most |
Polish: sok |
Persian: آب سبزی یا میوه |
Pashto: دميوواوتركارۍاوبه، شيره، |
Portuguese: sumo |
Romanian: suc |
Russian: сок |
Slovak: šťava |
Slovenian: sok |
Serbian: sok |
Swedish: saft, juice |
Thai: น้ำผลไม้ |
Turkish: meyve/sebze suyu |
Taiwanese: 果汁,蔬菜汁 |
Ukrainian: сік |
Urdu: عرق |
Vietnamese: nước ép |
Chinese: 果汁,菜汁 |
Get even more translations for Juice...
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