juice

noun
UK: /dʒuːs/
US: /dʒuːs/
  1. The liquid part of fruits or vegetables.

    1. I like orange juice with breakfast. [ ] [ ]
    2. Fresh apple juice provides essential vitamins and minerals for a healthy diet. [ ] [ ]
  2. Liquid produced from or resembling that from animal tissue.

    1. Meat juice dripped from the cooked roast. [ ] [ ]
    2. The succulent roast was basted with its own rich juice during cooking. [ ] [ ]
  3. Electricity.

    1. The power went out, so we lost the juice. [ ] [ ]
    2. After the storm, it took hours to restore the juice to the neighborhood. [ ] [ ]
juice verb
  1. To extract the juice from a fruit or vegetable.

    1. I will juice some oranges for breakfast. [ ] [ ]
    2. She likes to juice carrots and beets for a healthy morning beverage. [ ] [ ]
juice transitive-verb
  1. To give energy or excitement to something.

    1. The band's performance really juiced the crowd. [ ] [ ]
    2. Adding a new vocalist really juiced up their live performances. [ ] [ ]

Frequently Asked Questions

The word "juice" in English means: The liquid part of fruits or vegetables., Liquid produced from or resembling that from animal tissue., Electricity..

The phonetic transcription of "juice" is /dʒuːs/ in British English and /dʒuːs/ in American English. Click the 🔊 button to hear both pronunciations.

Synonyms for "juice": extract, sap, vitality, energy.

Example usage of "juice": "I like orange juice with breakfast.". More examples on the page.