Herbs from ancient France jus, juice, decoction, from Latius, gravy, soup, from PIE*yeue, mixed, stirred, fermented, etymology is the same as enzyme, zymurgy. Now it is often used to refer to fruit juice.
First, the phonetic symbol: English? 【d? u? S] beautiful? 【d? u? s]
Second, the significance:?
Noun (short for noun)? Fruit juice; Gravy; Digestive juice; Gasoline; vitality
Transitive verbs? Squeeze out juice; Energize
Third, the word form changes:
Past tense: juicing? Past participle:? Juice? Now participle:? Juice? Third person singular:? fruit juice
Fourth, phrase collocation:
drawoffjuice? Extract juice
drinkjuice? Drink juice
expressjuice? Squeeze out juice
Acidified urea? Acidified fruit juice
Post-squeezed juice? Secondary juicing
Iced juice. Refrigerated juice
condensedjuice? Concentrated juice
Apple juice? Apple Juice
Bottled juice? Bottled juice
Juice? fruit juice
Grapefruit juice? grapefruit juice
Lemon juice lemon juice
Introduction to the usage of verb (abbreviation of verb);
Fruit juice basically means "fruit juice, liquid", generally referring to the fruit juice or liquid of fruits, vegetables, meat, etc. It can be used as both uncountable and countable nouns.