malt liquor in English

noun
1
alcoholic liquor made from malt by fermentation rather than distillation; beer with a relatively high alcohol content.
‘Rap artists have been popular images in malt liquor advertising and ‘gangsta’ rap performers portray malt liquor as a sign of masculinity,’ she said.
noun

Use "malt liquor" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "malt liquor" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "malt liquor", or refer to the context using the word "malt liquor" in the English Dictionary.

1. Malt liquor.

2. Anaconda Malt Liquor.

3. Anaconda Malt Liquor gives you Little Richard.

4. 8-ounces of malt liquor (7% Alcohol content).

5. And what is the slogan for Anaconda Malt Liquor?

6. "Barleycorn," of course, refers to the barley used in malt liquor

7. Awkward conversations with old people, bad cheese plates... a funeral, a wedding, malt liquor.

8. • beer or malt liquor not exceeding 0.5% alcohol (i.e., non-alcoholic or de-alcoholised beer).

9. On all beer or malt liquor containing more than 2.5% absolute ethyl alcohol by volume, $31.22 per hectolitre.

10. I mean, how else do you get malt liquor and blood stains out of a rented prom dress?

11. "Barleycorn" undoubtedly became part of that euphemism for alcohol because Barleycorns (that is, grains of barley) are a key ingredient in malt liquor

12. I come from a place where kids can buy 35 flavors of blunt wrap at any day of the moment, where ice cream freezers are filled with slushy malt liquor.

13. She was Chugalugging from the 40-ounce bottle of Colt 45 malt liquor, and twirling the rifle, and if it was as I surmised, both Granny and the gun were loaded

14. (a) A holder of a Brewpub license for a Brewpub located in a wet area, as that term is described by Section 251.71 of this code, may: (1) manufacture, brew, bottle, can, package, and label malt liquor, ale, and beer;

15. In Britain and U.S., the grain is used mainly to prepare liquor, hence personification of malt liquor as John Barleycorn (1620) in popular ballads, and many now-obsolete figures of speech, such as to wear a barley cap (16c.) "to be drunk."