gin - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • sip: Would Hamlet be more relevant if he was wearing jeans and sipping a gin and tonic at a cocktail party?
  • pour: Pour gin into the jar, pressing the leaves down all the time, until they are just covered.
  • flavor: A bitter fruit can be used in mixed hedgerow jams, or to flavor gin.
  • drink: I drink gin in pubs with no Real Ale or decent wine.

Adjective modifier

  • 3cl: La Habana 3cl gin 3cl apricot brandy 3cl fresh lime juice Pour all ingredients into a shaker with ice.
  • Dutch: Clark bought not just for Britain but also for the colonies the Canadians in particular enjoyed the taste of Dutch gin.
  • pink: Luckily the motel manager was with me, and he ' gently ' explained what a pink gin was.
  • dry: Ingredients: one measure each of orange juice and cherry brandy, three measures each of dry gin and Dubonnet.
  • equal: ANGEL FACE Shake together equal parts gin, apricot brandy and calvados.

Modifies a noun

  • rummy: The smallest of details heading into today's gin rummy for.
  • palace: The final choice was Royal Diving 3, a gin palace.
  • distillery: Plymouth boasts the oldest gin distillery in the world.
  • ye: You keep yeir help an leave here gin ye want!
  • traps: Gin trap Traps were not only to protect human food from animals, they were also used to trap animals for food.
  • cocktail: The gin martini cocktail is suitably superb - allegedly the best this side of the Atlantic.

Noun used with modifier

  • sloe: I'll get the sloe gin started once I've been to Tesco later today.
  • cotton: Cotton gin Machine perfected in 1793 by American inventor Eli Whitney to separate cotton from its seed.
  • drinking: She was a large lazy woman, fond of sniffing ground tobacco called snuff and drinking gin.
  • premium: Bombay Sapphire, the premium gin in the translucent blue glass bottle, is closely linked to design.
  • horse: Here a ' secret ' passage led to a collapsed horse gin.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.