What's the difference between bourbon and rye?

Bourbon


Definition:

  • (n.) A member of a family which has occupied several European thrones, and whose descendants still claim the throne of France.
  • (n.) A politician who is behind the age; a ruler or politician who neither forgets nor learns anything; an obstinate conservative.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The nonethanol congeners of bourbon have been found to possess estrogenic activity when tested using an in vivo oophorectomized rat bioassay, as well as an in vivo estrogen receptor assay system.
  • (2) Blood acetaldehyde concentrations ranged from 0.11 to 0.15 and from 0.04 to 0.08 milligrams per 100 milliliters when blood ethanol concentrations ranged from 1 to 400 milligrams per 100 milliliters after consumption of bourbon or grain ethanol, respectively.
  • (3) Serves 2 100ml bourbon or whisky 250ml soda water 2 lemon slices 2 sprigs of rosemary For the syrup (makes about 250ml) 225ml lemon juice (5-6 lemons) 120g sugar 4-6 sprigs of rosemary 1 Combine all the syrup ingredients in a medium saucepan, then heat until just boiling.
  • (4) Forty male undergraduates over 21 years of age were provoked following their ingestion of either 1.5 ounces (.045 1) or .5 ounces (.015 1) of 100 proof bourbon or vodka per 40 (18 kg) of body weight.
  • (5) This song was sung by Garibaldi when he kicked the Bourbons out of Sicily.
  • (6) Michele Telaro, field coordinator of the MSF rescue ship Bourbon Argos, said it had taken three hours to recover 11 bodies.
  • (7) Further Italian scenes will be shot at the royal palace of Caserta in Campania, a huge 18th-century site constructed for the Bourbon kings of Naples, reports said.
  • (8) Recipe supplied by Ross Clarke, Dirty Bones, dirty-bones.com Rosemary and lemonade bourbons This will make more syrup than you need, but it keeps well in the fridge, and the recipe is easily doubled.
  • (9) These findings, using three methodological approaches, demonstrate that bourbon contains at least one biologically active phytoestrogen and suggest that the effects of alcoholic beverage use or abuse, particularly as they relate to endocrine systems, should not be viewed as resulting solely from exposure to ethanol.
  • (10) Working together on a series of studio nudes, Proud Flesh (exhibited in the US last year), was, as she puts it, "a chance to spend quiet afternoons together: no phone, no kids, two fingers of bourbon, the smell of the ether, the two of us – still in love, still at work."
  • (11) He smoked his pipe avidly and drank a little Bourbon whisky daily.
  • (12) In that same period, from 2010-2014, worldwide whiskey sales climbed 2.7%, with sales of American-made bourbons and Tennessee whiskeys up an incredible 17%.
  • (13) The four shopping lists were identical except for the fifth product; i.e., Ss received a shopping list including either marijuana, beer, bourbon, or soft drinks.
  • (14) I'm aiming to end in Memphis via Indianapolis, somewhere in Kentucky (you decide, hint: I like whisky, or whiskey, or bourbon, I won't take you to task over which – until I've sampled it), and also Nashville .
  • (15) If you’re a whiskey drinker, your happy place is The Gladly, which has a worldly collection of more than 200 varieties of scotch, bourbon and rye.
  • (16) French revolutionaries, preferring Garibaldis to Bourbons, were not taken with Henri.
  • (17) These findings indicate that the congeners present in bourbon did not affect significantly the development of tolerance to ethanol in goldfish.
  • (18) At Whiskey Ward , a “no-frills tavern with big list of scotch, whiskey & bourbon” on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, I ask bartender Robinson Diaz about the most popular request on busy weekends.
  • (19) To evaluate this hypothesis directly, de-ethanolized bourbon was prepared and orally administered to a single postmenopausal woman.
  • (20) Of course, if you go to Bourbon Street in the French Quarter at night it's pretty raucous.

Rye


Definition:

  • (n.) A grain yielded by a hardy cereal grass (Secale cereale), closely allied to wheat; also, the plant itself. Rye constitutes a large portion of the breadstuff used by man.
  • (n.) A disease in a hawk.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The absorption of zinc from meals based on 60 g of rye, barley, oatmeal, triticale or whole wheat was studied by use of extrinsic labelling with 65Zn and measurement of the whole-body retention of the radionuclide.
  • (2) Results indicate that the rachitogenic factor in rye is not present in the ash portion of the grain, that it can be largely overcome by water extraction and penicillin supplementation, and that an organic solvent extraction has no effect.
  • (3) A comparison was made of the kinetics of the carboxylation reaction of bicarbonate-magnesium-activated ribulose biphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase purified from cold-hardened and unhardened winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv.
  • (4) It is present on all seven rye chromosomes and hybridizes to the entire length of each chromosome, with the exception of some telomeres and the nucleolar organiser region.
  • (5) Experiments for uptaking and distribution of the culm stabiliser "camposan" with the agens ethephon are very important to tell something about the dwarf behaviour of the treated plants of rye.
  • (6) Quite a lot of the downtown action in The Catcher in the Rye (a night out in a fancy hotel; a date with an old girlfriend; an encounter with a prostitute, and a mugging by her pimp) might almost as well describe a young soldier’s nightmare experience of R&R.
  • (7) Alkaline ribonuclease (pH optimum 7.6) was isolated from rye (Secale cereale L) germ cytosol and partially purified; the preparation was devoid of other nucleolytic activities.
  • (8) Specific anti-wheat, rye and barley flour IgE antibodies were found by RAST.
  • (9) Preferential chromosome association at metaphase I has been analyzed and compared in autotetraploid cells obtained by colchicine treatment of hybrid diploid rye plants with different degrees of chromosomal divergence between homologs.
  • (10) In both cases the postprandial glucose response was lower after rye bread than after wheat bread.
  • (11) The transfer factor (TF) for Sr-90 was studied in 10 rye fields with podzolic soils near Bremen.
  • (12) In the clinical data-subjective and nasal challenge-the therapeutic effect seemed to be better in the group treated with grass- and rye-pollen.
  • (13) The alcohol-soluble (prolamin) storage proteins of barley, wheat and rye vary in their structures, but all have two features in common: the presence of distinct structural domains differing in amino acid compositions, and of repeats within one of these domains.
  • (14) Numbers of various inflammatory cells (neutrophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes, and monocytes) found in conjunctival scrapings were quantified and correlated with the clinical profile, total serum IgE, and serum IgE to Rye I antigen.
  • (15) Changes in IgE to oak, elm, box elder, AgE, and rye grass group I were minimal.
  • (16) Fruit, wheat, rye and beet fibre were studied in isoenergetic meals for NIDD patients and healthy volunteers.
  • (17) Its absence in rye shows that condensed rDNA need not be present in active plant nucleoli.
  • (18) The late author of The Catcher in the Rye, notoriously protective of his privacy, published nothing after the release of his story Hapworth 16, 1924 in the New Yorker, in 1965.
  • (19) The antibodies were tested against whole wheat gliadin and its alpha, beta, gamma, and omega subfractions, and the prolamins of rye, barley, oats, maize, millet, rice, and sorghum.
  • (20) It appears that screening for an IgE-mediated allergy can be performed with a limited number of skin tests (rye grass, timothy, birch, house dust mite and cat).

Words possibly related to "bourbon"