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A bottle of Unicum. Unicum (pronounced) is a Hungarian herbal liqueur or bitters, drunk as a digestif and apéritif. [1] The liqueur was created in 1790 and is today produced by Zwack according to a secret formula of more than forty herbs; the drink is aged in oak casks.
They generally pronounce near as /njɜr/, which rhymes near with a nurse word like sir or fur (compare general English realisations of cue and coo). Words such as beard are then pronounced as /bjɜrd/. [60] Usual word pairs like beer and burr are still distinguished as /bjɜr/ and /bɜr/.
I request you write this article in AmE and change the article title to "Licorice". (unsigned IP) Not done - the article is designated for British Oxford English (top of this talk page). See Etymology. A 2011 discussion about the spelling is in Talk:Liquorice/Archive 1. Spelling differences are part of WP:ENGVAR.
NEW ORLEANS ‒ On the booziest street in America, news that the Surgeon General thinks alcohol should come with warning labels is being met with a resounding "meh."
Port Royal municipal code says it is illegal to drink or carry an open container of beer, ale, or similar beverages with up to 5% alcohol by weight, or wine with up to 21% alcohol by volume, ...
Rhoticity – GA is rhotic while RP is non-rhotic; that is, the phoneme /r/ is only pronounced in RP when it is immediately followed by a vowel sound. [5] Where GA pronounces /r/ before a consonant and at the end of an utterance, RP either has no consonant (if the preceding vowel is /ɔː/, /ɜ:/ or /ɑː/, as in bore, burr and bar) or has a schwa instead (the resulting sequences being ...
The NFL playoff schedule is about to be set, with the wild-card dates and times for every matchup to be revealed during Week 18.
Liquorice (Commonwealth English) or licorice (American English; see spelling differences; IPA: / ˈ l ɪ k ər ɪ ʃ,-ɪ s / LIK-ər-ish, -iss) [5] [6] is the common name of Glycyrrhiza glabra, a flowering plant of the bean family Fabaceae, from the root of which a sweet, aromatic flavouring is extracted.