different between liquidator vs liqueur

liquidator

English

Etymology

liquidate +? -or

Noun

liquidator (plural liquidators)

  1. One who liquidates.
  2. One supporting the political policy of liquidationism; a liquidationist.
  3. Any of the workers involved in cleaning up the Chernobyl disaster

Related terms

  • liquefiable
  • liquefy
  • liquid
  • liquidate
  • liquidation
  • liquidity
  • liquidizer
  • liquify
  • liquor

Translations


Interlingua

Noun

liquidator (plural liquidatores)

  1. liquidator

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liqueur

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French liqueur. Doublet of liquor.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /l??kj??/, /l??kj??/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /l??k?/, /l??k??/

Noun

liqueur (countable and uncountable, plural liqueurs)

  1. A flavoured alcoholic beverage that is usually very sweet and contains a high percentage of alcohol. Cordials are a type of liqueur manufactured using the infusion process as opposed to the essence and distillation processes.

Related terms

Translations

See also

  • cordial
  • ratafia

Further reading

  • liqueur on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Verb

liqueur (third-person singular simple present liqueurs, present participle liqueuring, simple past and past participle liqueured)

  1. to flavor or treat (wine) with a liqueur
  2. to top up bottles of sparkling wine with a sugar solution
    Every champagne has to be liqueured after its disgorgement, to replace the inevitable loss.

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin liquor.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /li.kœ?/

Noun

liqueur f (plural liqueurs)

  1. alcoholic liqueur
  2. (literary) drinkable liquid
  3. (Canada) fizzy drink, pop
  4. (obsolete) liquid
  5. (Louisiana) liquor

Derived terms

  • liqueur de dosage
  • liqueur de tirage

Usage notes

  • Liqueur and liquor are false friends: French liqueur never applies to alcoholic drinks in general.
  • The Quebec use of the term is frequently targeted as an anglicism (from liquor), even though the meaning ("non-alcoholic drink") is older and has little connection to either English term.

Further reading

  • “liqueur” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

liqueur From the web:

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