Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Scotch's companion ", 4 letters:
soda

Alternative clues for the word soda

Usage examples of soda.

The precipitate is filtered quickly through a large filter, and washed with hot water containing a little acetate of soda.

Whether this acidity should be reported in terms of the lime or of the soda required to neutralise it will depend on which of these reagents is to be used in the actual practice.

It is prepared when wanted in solution, by adding a gram or so of bicarbonate of soda and then as much acid as will decompose the bicarbonate mentioned.

This was accomplished with a design a lot like those bendable plastic soda straws, a bellows arrangement.

Byron said, walking into a well-furnished living room where an ice buket, a bottlt of Scotch, and soda bottles stood on a table.

The canapes she keeps waving under all the old noses are soda crackers pooped on with meat by-products.

The filtrate, cooled and rendered alkaline with soda, is ready for the titration.

But there was no sliced bread in Cush, only brown bread and soda bread that her grandmother made, and loaves of white bread with a hard crust which they bought in Blackwater.

If, however, soda biscuits are made thin and baked thoroughly so as to make them at least half or two-thirds crust, they are perfectly digestible and wholesome, and furnish a valuable and appetizing variety for our breakfast and supper tables.

In the sudden quiet that followed she heard a gurgle like a straw in the bottom of a soda glass and Dubby folded into himself like an empty laundry bag.

For him, cars effervescing like soda water had all the fascination of cracks in the pavement.

Making freebase with baking soda was so easy that even a child could do it.

Similarly, if to a silicate of lime we add oxide of iron, or soda, or even alumina, a fusible double silicate will be formed.

So, too, soda, which is a very strong base, may act prejudicially if it be in sufficient excess to set free notable quantities of lime and magnesia, which but for that excess would exist in combination as complex fusible silicates.

The sun had risen high enough to illuminate the crates of lime and orange and grape and strawberry soda stacked beside the jukebox, causing the bottles to glow with gemmy brilliance.