Juice
11Juice — Juice,derod.das:⇨Fruchtsaft …
12Juice — 〈 [dʒu:s] m. od. n.; Gen.: , Pl.: s [ sız]〉 roher Obst oder Gemüsesaft [Etym.: engl.] …
13juice up — (something) to make something more interesting or exciting. The team s new forward has juiced up their games with fast passing and running. She finds songs no one remembers and juices them up with modern rhythms …
14juice — (izg. dž s) m DEFINICIJA v. džus ETIMOLOGIJA engl …
15juice — [n] liquid squeezed from fruit, plant abstract, alcohol, aqua vitae, distillation, drink, essence, extract, fluid, liquor, milk, nectar, oil, sap, sauce, secretion, serum, spirit, syrup, water; concepts 428,467 …
16juice — sb., n, r, rne (saft) …
17Juice — [dʒ̮u:s ], der oder das; , s <englisch> (Obst oder Gemüsesaft) …
18Juice — This article is about the beverage. For other uses, see Juice (disambiguation). Orange juice Juice is the liquid that is naturally contained in fruit or vegetable tissue. Juice is prepared by mechanically squeezing or macerating fruit or… …
19Juice FM — Coordinates: 53°24′10″N 2°58′46″W / 53.4029°N 2.9795°W / 53.4029; 2.9795 …
20juice — 1. (the juice) intoxicants The common modern use probably came from the literal meaning, liquid of fruit, rather than from the Scottish juice of the bear, whisky. Juniper juice was gin but the juice can be any spirits: The cops will… …