1837 April, J. M. (London), in "Miscellaneous Intelligence: Art. V. Queries and Answers",The Gardener's Magazine, August edition, page 378.
You are aware, I presume, that immense quantities of sugar are annually made from thejuice of theA`cer sacchárinum,[sic] in the west of Pennsylvania and New York, with which our forests abound (Professor Kid, in hisBridgwater Treatise, says they are “cultivated”!); and, as the peculiarities attending the flow of thisjuice have puzzled me to explain them, I have resolved to state them to you.
1940 November, Dwight M. DeLong, “Studies of Methods and Materials for the Control of the Leafhopper Empoasca fabae as a Bean Pest”, inTechnical Bulletin, number740, United States Department of Agriculture, page26:
The plantjuices of both bean and potato gave strong positive tests, showing that thejuices of these plants can readily dissolve copper in some form from bordeaux-mixture residue and absorb it through a permeable membrane.
1938, C.B. Hutchison, S.B. Freeborn,Toward Better Agriculture: Report of the Agricultural Experiment Station of the University of California, page44:
The bottledjuice must be heated to a temperature and for a time sufficient to attain a sterilizing temperature at the coolest point, usually the center of the bottle.
2006, Katie Kitamura,Japanese for Travellers: A Journey, Hamish Hamilton (publ.), page 189.
My mom placed a glass ofjuice before her, then looked questioningly towards the son.
1884 July, Alfales Young, “Letter from Salt Lake City”, inWallace's Monthly, volume X, number 6, page450:
This chance manner of her laying herself fallow gives her an opportunity of recovering herjuices, or strength, to enable her to breed a stronger foal.
2019, Timothy Andrews Sayle, Jeffrey A. Engel, Hal Brands, William Inboden, editors,The Last Card: Inside George W. Bush's Decision to Surge in Iraq, page161:
And privately the president says, “Do the Iraqis have thejuice to carry this off?”
CNBC'sMatthews: "The power in the Republican party[sic] in terms of who's got thejuice, who knows how to win elections, has clearly moved tonight ... from Capitol Hill, the Newt Gingrich crowd, to the governors' crowd" ("Hardball," CNBC. 11/3).
1973, Stephen Barlay,Double Cross: Encounters with Industrial Spies, Hamish Hamilton (publ.), page 227.
Drove across the road to the petrol station and waited for five minutes—without buyingjuice.
2009, William J. Holstein,Why GM Matters: Inside the Race to Transform an American Icon, Walker Books, page137:
Drivers running short on power could simply stop at a gas station and fill up, obviating the fear of running out ofjuice on a long and lonely road, always a risk with the EV-1.
This is the shrine of the God That Works, Driving away the mists and murks, Turning the lightnings into use. This is the shrine of the mighty"Juice," Flowing ever the long wires through, And making the dream, the Dream come true!
1981, Susan Griffin,Pornography and Silence: Culture's Revenge Against Nature, page 62, quoting Yvette Clemons,The Skin Flick Rapist.
The demand that a woman drink semen is repeated throughout pornography. Volume after volume presents such scenes as this which we find inThe Skin Flick Rapist: "Maria gagged on hisjuice. It made him so angry that he reached out with his right hand and pulled at her hair."
2005, Michael Thomas Ford,Tangled Sheets, Kensington Books, page242:
I pulled my cock out of North and he fell forward, his face in the cum-soaked laundry. He rolled over on his back and looked up at me. I shook the last drops ofjuice from my prick.
1990, Wayne Jancik,The Billboard Book of One-Hit Wonders,→ISBN, page160:
The Nashville Teens convened in 1962 when Ramon "Ray" Phillips and Arthur Sharp, members of two local rival groups, decided to join their musicaljuices.
Saw your girlfriend, you don't need advice / Always in your ear like, "He's not nice" / She's just upset cause she gotjuiced in the bunk bed / And you know, she's not wife
In a more generic sense, like when used as an ingredient,juice is usually instead calledsaft.
Juice always refers to a beverage containing 100% fruit. Fruit beverages with added sugar and/or water are calledsaft.
A well-known, largely unsuccessful attempt was made to popularize "jos" as a Swedified spelling in the 1970s. "Jos" is now often used in tongue-in-cheek reference.