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Another name for liquor in 1920?
During the Prohibition era (1920-1933), there were many slang terms for liquor. Here are a few common ones:
* Booze: This was a very popular and general term for alcoholic beverages.
* Hooch: This term referred to homemade or illegal alcohol, often of poor quality.
* White Mule: A slang term for moonshine, a type of illegal whiskey.
* Shine: Another term for moonshine.
* Bathtub gin: A term for gin made illegally in bathtubs, often with poor-quality ingredients.
* Juice: A general term for any kind of alcoholic beverage.
* Firewater: A more poetic term for strong alcohol.
* The sauce: A colloquial term for alcohol, often used when referring to drinking in general.
* The stuff: A general and often secretive term for alcohol.
These are just a few examples, and there were many other terms in use during the Prohibition era. It's important to remember that these terms were used by both those who were producing and consuming alcohol, as well as law enforcement officers who were trying to stop it.
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