How to use in-sentence of “absinthe”:
– By 1910 the French were drinking 36 million litres of absinthe per year.
– When the troops returned home, they started to drink absinthe with water.
– At the end of 1900 the French were drinking over 2 million litres of absinthe a year.
– In the 1840s absinthe was given to French soldiers as a malaria treatment.
– In the Netherlands, the old law banning absinthe was successfully challenged by the Amsterdam wine seller Menno Boorsma.
– A legend says that blood sausage was invented in a gamblingbet between two Bavarian butchers drunk on the alcoholic drink absinthe during the 14th century.
– The export and import of absinthe is probably illegal.
Example sentences of “absinthe”:
- Traditionally, absinthe is put into a glass.
- Journalists blamed absinthe for many social problems.
- By the 1880s the price had dropped a lot, the market got bigger, and absinthe soon became "the" drink of France.
– Traditionally, absinthe is put into a glass.
– Journalists blamed absinthe for many social problems.
– By the 1880s the price had dropped a lot, the market got bigger, and absinthe soon became “the” drink of France.
– An absinthe spoon is simply a special spoon, placed over a glass of absinthe.
– It is also famous for being the historical birthplace of absinthe which is now once again being distilled in the region.
– In 1797, Henry-Louis Pernod, opened the first absinthe distillery, called “Dubied Père et Fils”, in Couvet.
– In 1900 absinthe was banned in Switzerland.
– By the early 21st century, nearly 200 brands of absinthe were being produced in a dozen countries, most notably in France, Switzerland, Australia, Spain, and the Czech Republic.
– In July 2004 it became legal to make absinthe again.
– After the absinthe prohibition, wine and whiskey makers had a big increase in sales.
– A revival of absinthe began in the 1990s, after modern European Union food and beverage laws removed barriers to its production and sale.
– By 1915, absinthe had been banned in the United States and in much of Europe, including France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Austria-Hungary.