资料来源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Liquor \Liq"uor\ (l[i^]k"[~e]r), n. [OE. licour, licur, OF.
licur, F. liqueur, fr. L. liquor, fr. liquere to be liquid.
See {Liquid}, and cf. {Liqueur}.]
1. Any liquid substance, as water, milk, blood, sap, juice,
or the like.
2. Specifically, alcoholic or spirituous fluid, either
distilled or fermented, as brandy, wine, whisky, beer,
etc.
3. (Pharm.) A solution of a medicinal substance in water; --
distinguished from tincture and aqua.
Note: The U. S. Pharmacop[oe]ia includes, in this class of
preparations, all aqueous solutions without sugar, in
which the substance acted on is wholly soluble in
water, excluding those in which the dissolved matter is
gaseous or very volatile, as in the aqu[ae] or waters.
--U. S. Disp.
{Labarraque's liquor} (Old Chem.), a solution of an alkaline
hypochlorite, as sodium hypochlorite, used in bleaching
and as a disinfectant.
{Liquor of flints}, or {Liquor silicum} (Old Chem.), soluble
glass; -- so called because formerly made from powdered
flints. See {Soluble glass}, under {Glass}.
{Liquor of Libavius}. (Old Chem.) See {Fuming liquor of
Libavius}, under {Fuming}.
{Liquor sanguinis} (s[a^]n"gw[i^]n*[i^]s) (Physiol.), the
blood plasma.
{Liquor thief}, a tube for taking samples of liquor from a
cask through the bung hole.
{To be in liquor}, to be intoxicated.