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Definition of Liquor license
1. Noun. A license authorizing the holder to sell alcoholic beverages.
Generic synonyms: Licence, License, Permit
Specialized synonyms: On-license
Lexicographical Neighbors of Liquor License
Literary usage of Liquor license
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Index of Economic Material in Documents of the States of the United States by Adelaide Rosalia Hasse (1907)
"Table showing liquor license fees in principal cities of US (2 AR excise dept.
... Tables showing liquor license fees under old excise laws in effect in ..."
2. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1918)
"Under statutory authority providing that a liquor license shall be annulled by
the sale of ... The right of a holder of a liquor license granted by a city, ..."
3. The Law and Practice in Bankruptcy Under the National Bankruptcy Act of 1898 by William Miller Collier, William Horace Hotchkiss, Frank Bixby Gilbert, Fred Eugene Rosbrook (1921)
"718, holding that the right to apply for a renewal of a liquor license is an
asset which passes to the trustee. Compare In re Emrich (DC, Pa.), 4 Am. BR SO; ..."
4. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1887)
"the various State Associations with reference to memorializing Congress to remove
the §25 internal revenue liquor license and the tax on alcohol. ..."
5. Report by Colorado, Division of Finance, Dept. of Finances and Taxation (1906)
"As you are aware, the liquor license law was enacted April 4, 1901, and re-enacted
on March 22, 1902, at a special session of the Legislature. ..."
6. A Digest of the Reported Cases Determined in the Superior Courts of Ontario by Christopher Robinson, Frank John Joseph (1884)
"The court refused to quash a conviction under the liquor license Act ... That the
liquor license Act applies to Indian land under lease from the crown to a ..."