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Example sentences for "orange juice"

  • Saccharin to sweeten Soak gelatin in cold water; dissolve over hot water, add to orange juice; add saccharin; set aside until it begins to jelly.

  • Orange juice (strained through muslin) may be usually given at five or six months of age.

  • Orange juice, lettuce, cabbage, and spinach are valuable sources of this vitamine.

  • Flavor with a teaspoonful vanilla or orange juice, then turn into a square pan that has been dusted with cornstarch.

  • Let it cook quickly and stir as it thickens, and after ten minutes add two tablespoons of butter and one-half cup of orange juice.

  • Add a half cupful of boiling water, stir until the gelatin is dissolved, and add the sugar and the orange juice.

  • Pineapples pared, cut into dice or small pieces, lightly sprinkled with sugar, to which just before serving, a cup of orange juice is added, form a delicious dish.

  • Stir until well dissolved, add the juice of one small lemon, one cupful of orange juice, and one half cup of sugar.

  • Powder lightly with sugar, and turn over them a cupful of orange juice to a pint of tomato, or if preferred, the juice of lemons may be used instead.

  • Orange juice with a very little of the grated rind, or pineapple juice may be substituted for the lemon, if preferred.

  • The change from milk sugar to malt sugar has helped many infants; while the giving of orange juice (after six months) is very beneficial in many cases.

  • If the patient is old enough to drink from a cup, put in a layer of orange juice and then the castor oil and then another layer of orange juice, and in this way it often can be easily taken.

  • Orange juice may be given at six months; while, after four months, unsweetened prune juice is better than medicine for the bowels.

  • The flavoring may be a quarter of a teaspoonful of vanilla, or a tablespoonful of orange juice.

  • If it must be used, for reasons of safety, some uncooked food, such as orange juice, should also be given.

  • The flavoring may be: 1 teaspoonful vanilla, or a few tablespoonfuls of orange juice, or the vanilla, plus three or four tablespoonfuls of cocoa to suit the taste.

  • Chill, and serve with sugar and cream, or Pour on lemon or orange juice, add sugar, and chill.

  • Pour it into the jar that contains the orange juice; stir the mixture well, and add the yellow rind of the oranges, pared so thin from the white as to be transparent, and divide it into bits.

  • Wash a pound of prunes, and stew them in orange juice, adding the yellow rind of an orange, pared so fine as to be transparent--or grate it.

  • When cool, cut the buns into squares, and ice each one separately, if for company; the icing being flavored with lemon or orange juice.

  • One pint of water, one pint of orange juice, the juice of two lemons, and one-half pound of sugar.

  • Orange juice may be used in place of the lemon juice.

  • This is true not only of lemon and of orange juice as demonstrated experimentally and clinically, but even of milk, which even after it has been dried and stored for months, may still possess marked curative value.

  • Is it of no moment whether the infant receive its quota of antiscorbutic every few hours through the medium of the breast milk, or only once a day in the form of orange juice or tomato?

  • Harden and Zilva found this to be the case with lemon juice stored for a fortnight in the cold room, and our experience has been similar in regard to orange juice kept in the refrigerator under a layer of liquid petrolatum.

  • Put a tablespoon of orange juice into a small tumbler, pour in the required amount of oil, and more orange juice on top.

  • Wine may be used instead of orange juice.

  • Three eggs beaten light with one cupful of sugar, add one teaspoonful of butter, one teaspoonful of vanilla and one tablespoonful of brandy or whiskey or orange juice if liquor is not liked.

  • Dissolve one fourth pound loaf sugar in one pint boiling water; add juice of one lemon, one pint of orange juice, one half cup brandy, one half cup rum.

  • Plenty of pure water, cold or hot, new cider, buttermilk, orange juice, unfermented grape juice.

  • Orange juice as well as lemonade may generally be given.

  • Orange juice or lemon juice may be given in moderation.

  • This should be given in addition to his beef juice or orange juice.

  • To these must be added canned tomato juice which Hess has shown practically equal to orange juice in efficiency and uses with infants in the same quantity.

  • The disease of scurvy and its prevention by use of orange juice potatoes, etc.

  • Let him attempt to do it on orange juice, and what ensues?

  • Because, naturally, a chap doesn't want to have to sprint about country houses lugging jugs of orange juice, unless it is absolutely essential.

  • Because he would have been attempting the hopeless task of trying to do the thing on orange juice.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "orange juice" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    believing that; blown rose; carried about; constitutional rights; fine cloth; found only; four braccia; individual character; living conditions; only five; orange blossoms; orange color; orange flower; orange flowers; orange grove; orange juice; orange peel; orange trees; other areas; paternal power; silky hair; thirty feet; this institution; volatile alkali; went out; you like