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The word drink is primarily a verb, meaning to ingest liquids, see Drinking.
As a noun, it refers to the liquid thus ingested. It is often used in a narrower sense to refer to alcoholic beverages (as both a verb and a noun).
It can also be used metaphorically, as in to drink in the scenery.
A beverage is a drink specifically prepared for human consumption. Almost always it largely consists of
water. These include:
- Water, from the tap or from a bottle
- Juice, for example fruit juices,
vegetable juices, which may
be fresh or made from a concentrate.
- Soft drinks
- Lemonade
- Orange drink
- Carbonated drinks (generally called sodas in the Eastern U.S., pop in the Midwestern U.S., and
cokes in the Southern U.S.), including just carbonated water
- Squash, a fruit-flavoured syrup diluted with water.
- Sports drinks
- Infusions
- Dairy drinks, for example milk,
yogurt drink, chocolate milk,
milkshake
- Alcoholic beverages
- Cocktails - mixed drinks
- Hot beverages, for example
coffee, tea, hot chocolate, hot
cider
- Pearl milk tea, aka Boba Milk Tea, is a tea drink popular in China
and among overseas Chinese.
Some substances may either be called food or drink, and accordingly be eaten with a
spoon or drunk, depending on solid ingredients in it and on how thick it is, and on preference:
Hot beverages and hot food can cause burns when drunk or eaten too hot and/or too fast,
and when spilled. See also McDonald's coffee
case.
See also: food, vacuum
flask, Wikipedia Cocktail Guide.
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