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jmdict 2850499 Active (id: 2146857)
<entry id="2146857" stat="A" corpus="jmdict" type="jmdict">
<ent_corp type="jmdict">jmdict</ent_corp>
<ent_seq>2850499</ent_seq>
<k_ele>
<keb>カップ酒</keb>
</k_ele>
<r_ele>
<reb>カップざけ</reb>
</r_ele>
<sense>
<pos>&n;</pos>
<gloss>cup sake</gloss>
<gloss g_type="expl">sake sold in a single-serve glass cup or can</gloss>
</sense>
<info>
<audit time="2021-09-17 03:28:17" stat="A" unap="true">
<upd_name>Marcus Richert</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>do we tag drinks as [food]?</upd_detl>
<upd_refs>daijs
https://www.nippon.com/en/nipponblog/m00146/
Japan’s single-serve cup sake is the best way to casually enjoy nihonshu.
Although often characterized as a cheap tipple of boozing older men, cup sake is a diverse category that spans 
everything from mass-market varieties to small-batch, premium grades.
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2005/12/15/national/cup-sake-goes-down-well-with-the-trendy/
'Cup sake' goes down well with the trendy 
Sake is finding a new fan base for “cup sake,” drunk straight from the single-serving container it is sold in.


カップ酒	68572</upd_refs>
</audit>
<audit time="2021-09-17 04:21:40" stat="A">
<upd_uid>jwb</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Jim Breen</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>A bit wasei-ish.  I don't think we label it "food".</upd_detl>
</audit>
</info>
</entry>



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