cow-juice

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See also: cow juice and cowjuice

English

Noun

cow-juice (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of cow juice.
    • 1861 February 6, “A Very Domestic Man”, in Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, volume XXVII, number 10165, Buffalo, N.Y.: E. R. Jewett, front page, column 4:
      Anon the bossy kicked like fork-ed lightning, laying out Shanghai Chandler flat on his stable floor, completely painting him with foamy cow-juice, flipping his hat far to the lee-ward, jamming up the tin milk-pail like a stepped-on stove-pipe, and causing a white editor to spout milk from his nose like a porpoise.
    • 1991 March 4, Tom Brown, “‘Healthy’ Diet Is Pure Tripe!”, in Daily Record, Glasgow, page 10:
      Instead of milk on my porridge, a thin, watery liquid unrecognisable as cow-juice.
    • 1999 December 6, Joe O’Shea, “Joe’s History: The Things We Wish Were True”, in The Star, Dublin, page 39:
      BEFORE the advent of pasteurisation, consuming dairy foods was considered to be the ultimate adventure sport. Daredevils would draw large crowds to Victorian funfairs to watch them drink a pint of cow-juice while on a trapeze.
    • 2011, Joolz Denby, Wild Thing, : Ignite, →ISBN, page 245:
      I needed that joint, and a vegetarian supper. What a child of the urban world I was: meat came on polystyrene trays wrapped in clingfilm and milk was bottled cow-juice. The countryside was another planet, really.
    • 2014 November 14, Nick Curtis, “Give me a child and I’ll give you a banker”, in Evening Standard, London, page 15, column 2:
      Pre-pubescent rogue traders working through nap time in order to stay one step ahead of the markets and the opposition (“you snooze, you lose”) and demanding the finest cow-juice known to mankind from the milk monitor.
    • 2015, Alex Christofi, Glass: A Novel, London: Serpent’s Tail, →ISBN, page 24:
      I’d take my float and drive my figure of eight round the neighbourhood, picking up empties and delivering bottles of creamy white cow-juice, capped with red foil.