juice
Meanings
Plural: juices
Noun
- the liquid part that can be extracted from plant or animal tissue by squeezing or cooking
- energetic vitality
- "her creative juices were flowing"
- electric current
- "when the wiring was finished they turned on the juice"
- any of several liquids of the body
- "digestive juices"
- A liquid from a plant, especially fruit.
- A beverage made of juice.
- Any liquid resembling juice.
- A soft drink.
- Any liquid resembling juice.
- Liquor.
- Any liquid resembling juice.
- The liquid that is used to submerge a substance kept in a container
- Any liquid resembling juice.
- The leftover liquid of some wet or damp substance.
- Any liquid resembling juice.
- bodily secretion, especially that secreted by the glands of the stomach and intestines.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Vitality; strength.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Political power.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Petrol; gasoline.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Electricity.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Battery life.
- Any source or enabler of significant positive effects.
- Steroids.
- Semen.
- The vaginal lubrication that a female naturally produces when sexually aroused.
- The amount charged by a bookmaker for betting services.
- Musical agreement between instrumentalists.
Verb
- To extract the juice from something.
- To energize or stimulate something.
- To take a performance-enhancing drug.
- To have sexual intercourse with.
Adj
- Alternative spelling of Jew's (used in certain set phrases like juice harp)
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English jus, juis, from Old French jus, jous, from Latin jūs (“broth, soup, sauce”), from Proto-Indo-European *yéwHs, from *yewH- (“to mix (of meal preparation)”). Doublet of jus and ukha. In this sense, mostly displaced native Middle English sew (“juice”), from Old English sēaw (“juice, sap”) (> English sew (“juice, broth, gravy”)). Sense of "soft drink" most likely an ellipsis of fizzy juice, another similarly common term in Scotland.
Synonyms
Any of Thesaurus:copulate + "with", ball, bang, bauf, be with, bed, beep, boff, boink, bone, bonk, boom-boom, coit, coitize, cut, dick, diddle, dig out, dight, dino juice, do, doink, drill, eff, enjoy, expletive deleted, feague, feck, fill, Formal terms, frack, frak, frick, frig, fuck, get into someone's pants, get over on, get up in, give someone one, give someone the time, go in unto, go to bed with, go with, have, have one's way with, have one's wicked way with, hit, hump, Informal and slang terms, jape, juice up, jump, jump someone's bones, knob, knock, knock off, know, know someone in the biblical sense, lay, lie by, lie with, love, love up, make, mount, nail, occupy, penetrate, plough, plug, poke, pork, pound, prig, pump, ream, rock, roger, root, run through, rut, sard, schlong, screw, season, seduce, see to, service, shaft, shag, shelve, slay, sleep with, slip it to, smash, smush, stallionize, succus, swive, take, tap, tup, vig, vigorish, wap
Scrabble Score: 14
juice is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL wordjuice is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
juice is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary