- (English: /dʒəˈniːvər/, Dutch: [jəˈneːvər] ), also
known as Hollands, genever,
genièvre, peket, or
sometimes as
Dutch gin (archaic:
Holland gin or
Geneva gin)...
-
shortened form of the
older English word genever,
related to the
French word
genièvre and the
Dutch word jenever. All
ultimately derive from juniperus, the Latin...
- John
Collins calling for
Holland Gin, most
likely what is now
known as
Genièvre. Johnson's
recipe for Tom
Collins from 1882 is as follows: Three-quarters...
-
alcoholic spirit gin. The
traditional drink jenever and its
French name
genièvre are
names for juniper. The
French name was
shortened to geneva, sounding...
- (Cliodalis), the kingdom's
seneschal and
father of Guinevere's half-sister
Genievre, and Guyomar, a
cousin of
Guinevere and one of
early lovers of her sister-in-law...
- the Netherlands. The name gin
itself is
derived from
either the
French genièvre or the
Dutch jenever, both of
which mean "juniper".
Other juniper-flavoured...
- Chrétien-influenced
French prose cycles, who
would use also its
variants such as
Genievre (
Genièvre) or Gueneure. Her many
other various names appearing through the different...
-
flavoured with
berries of the
juniper tree, are
distilled in Houlle, the
Genièvre (juniper) of Houlle; this
spirit is very
close to the
Dutch jenever and...
-
declares his love for Clélia
before his
family and fiancé,
Genièvre, the
sister of MacRoi.
Genièvre responds by
calling off
their wedding and
hitting him....
-
words such as
ginepro (Italian),
juniper (English),
jenever (Dutch), and
genièvre (French), from the
Latin iuni-pero
meaning “evergreen.” It is also ****ociated...