| slovo | definícia |  
potable (encz) | potable,pitný	adj: [žert.]		Nijel |  
Potable (gcide) | Potable \Po"ta*ble\, a. [F., fr. L. potabilis, fr. potare to
    drink; akin to Gr. po`tos a drinking, po`sis a drink, Skr.
    p[=a] to drink, OIr. ibim I drink. Cf. Poison, Bib,
    Imbibe.]
    Fit to be drunk; drinkable. "Water fresh and potable."
    --Bacon. -- n. A potable liquid; a beverage. "Useful in
    potables." --J. Philips.
    [1913 Webster] |  
potable (wn) | potable
     adj 1: suitable for drinking [syn: drinkable, potable] [ant:
            undrinkable]
     n 1: any liquid suitable for drinking; "may I take your beverage
          order?" [syn: beverage, drink, drinkable, potable] |  
potable (devil) | POTABLE, n.  Suitable for drinking.  Water is said to be potable;
 indeed, some declare it our natural beverage, although even they find
 it palatable only when suffering from the recurrent disorder known as
 thirst, for which it is a medicine.  Upon nothing has so great and
 diligent ingenuity been brought to bear in all ages and in all
 countries, except the most uncivilized, as upon the invention of
 substitutes for water.  To hold that this general aversion to that
 liquid has no basis in the preservative instinct of the race is to be
 unscientific -- and without science we are as the snakes and toads.
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  | | podobné slovo | definícia |  
Potable (gcide) | Potable \Po"ta*ble\, a. [F., fr. L. potabilis, fr. potare to
    drink; akin to Gr. po`tos a drinking, po`sis a drink, Skr.
    p[=a] to drink, OIr. ibim I drink. Cf. Poison, Bib,
    Imbibe.]
    Fit to be drunk; drinkable. "Water fresh and potable."
    --Bacon. -- n. A potable liquid; a beverage. "Useful in
    potables." --J. Philips.
    [1913 Webster] |  
Potableness (gcide) | Potableness \Po"ta*ble*ness\, n.
    The quality of being drinkable.
    [1913 Webster] |  
Unpotable (gcide) | Unpotable \Unpotable\
    See potable. |  
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