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soft drink

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soft drink

Nonalcoholic beverage, usually carbonated, consisting of water (soda water), flavouring, and a sweet syrup or artificial sweetener. Attempts to reproduce the natural effervescence of certain spring waters for presumed health benefits began before 1700. Joseph Priestley's experiments with “fixed air” (carbon dioxide) led in the late 1790s to the successful preparation of carbonated “mineral water” by Jacob Schweppe of Geneva; by the early 1800s it was being bottled and sold commercially. Today there are hundreds of varieties of flavoured soft drinks. Some of the world's largest corporations (including Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo) founded their businesses on soft-drink manufacturing.



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Tokyo, Japan, June 21, 2006 - (JCN) - Japanese market researcher Fuji Keizai has published a report on the Japanese soft drink market, which estimates that the market for soft drink products reached 5,050.
Dingle says that 'people could lose about half a kilo a month if they stopped drinking their standard one or two cans of soft drink a day' (West Australian, 7/3/06, p.
The Atkins diet, despite its flaws, was on target in urging people to minimize soft drinks and other foods rich in refined sugars and starches.
 
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