¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Licorices
1. licorice [n] - See also: licorice
Lexicographical Neighbors of Licorices
Literary usage of Licorices
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"Ц created three licorices—(1) for hotels, (2) for public.houses, (3) grocers'
licences. Under tho hotel licence intoxicating liquors may be sold to lodgers ..."
2. Minnesota Plant Life by Conway MacMillan (1899)
"and tick-trefoils, the wild licorices, the ground-plums, locust trees, pommes de
terre, sweet clovers, ..."
3. Bulletin of Pharmacy (1914)
"Y & S and M & R stick licorices, products of the National Licorice Co., packed
in individual cartons meet with a ready sale during the "cold" months. ..."
4. Reports of All the Cases Decided by All the Superior Courts Relating to by Edward William Cox, Great BRitain Magistrates' cases (1889)
"Certainly there was no distinction in an Excise licence between a new licence
and a licence by way of renewal. These licorices were continued up to 1869, ..."
5. Getting Gold: A Practical Treatise for Prospectors, Miners and Students by Joseph Colin Francis Johnson (1898)
"Business licorices may also be granted enabling persons to occupy Crown lands
within gold-fields for business purposes, on payment of a foe of ;£1 for a ..."
6. Proceedings of the Ohio State Pharmaceutical Association: Annual Meeting by Ohio State Pharmaceutical Association (1887)
"... the residues of the imported licorices being in flat scales, while that of
the domestic are very fine, heavy, pulverulent and will therefore readily ..."
7. Reports of the Survey (1899)
"and tick-trefoils, the wild licorices, the ground-plums, locust trees, pommes de
terre, sweet clovers, ..."