He speaks while sipping a soda in the restaurant of the Residence Victoria in downtown Kisangani.
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Derika Moses hefted a case of 2-liter soda bottles while setting up a grocery store display in 2007.
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He was hungry, so he brought along a fast food burger and soda to the studio.
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“If someone drinks [more than] 20 ounces of soda per day, switching them to diet soda will help weight loss,” Roussell says.
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It is asserted there that soda water was invented in Belfast.
One Irish Summer|William Eleroy Curtis
Wrayson helped himself to a whisky and soda, and lit a cigar.
The Avenger|E. Phillips Oppenheim
Before each man was a long tumbler of whisky and soda, and a box of cigars lay on the table.
The Pit Prop Syndicate|Freeman Wills Crofts
Let her alone until she rouses,—then give her hot water with a pinch of soda in it at fifteen-minute intervals.
Outside Inn|Ethel M. Kelley
I've not forgotten the last brandy and soda I had with you at Oxford.
The Missionary|George Griffith
British Dictionary definitions for soda
soda
/ (ˈsəʊdə) /
noun
any of a number of simple inorganic compounds of sodium, such as sodium carbonate (washing soda), sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), and sodium hydroxide (caustic soda)
See soda water
US and Canadiana fizzy drink
the top card of the pack in faro
a sodaAustralianslangsomething easily done; a pushover
Word Origin for soda
C16: from Medieval Latin, from sodanum barilla, a plant that was burned to obtain a type of sodium carbonate, perhaps of Arabic origin