1.One wrong step by a moonshiner or a few degrees in temperature can produce poisonous methanol instead of high-test ethanol.
英:['mu:nˌʃaɪnə]
美:['munˌʃaɪnə]
moon·shin·er
mun shaI nr
noun
(informal) a person who makes and sells illegally distilled alcoholic liquor, such as corn whiskey.
The first known use of moonshiner was in 1860
1.One wrong step by a moonshiner or a few degrees in temperature can produce poisonous methanol instead of high-test ethanol.
2.In that moment, he realized that his father was storing the glassware for the moonshiners who were brewing across the road.
3.So moonshiners put the skills they had to work to feed their families.
4.Frierson said his office does not have a good overall estimate on money lost to moonshiners.
5.North Carolina moonshiner Marsh Williams modifies the30-caliber M-1 while serving 30 years in prison.
6.My kinfolk include dirt farmers, politicians and moonshiners.
7.The Busbees moved into a log cabin in a settlement they named Jugtown, the generic name for rural potteries that supplied earthen vessels to moonshiners.
8.A few birch logs, authenticity unconfirmed, lay on the floor and a replica of a moonshiner’s porch stood between throbbing speakers.
9.“Nascar is going to be a thing of the past. They are taking everything out for what it stands for. It was put together by rednecks, moonshiners and hillbillies.”
10.A Florida moonshiner called Gator turns informer to catch the sheriff who killed his brother.
11.Yates: At least moonshiners because they were using this stream and another place to get the water to make their moonshine there, so.
12.For decades, it fostered an outlaw image true to its roots of good ol’ boy moonshiners outrunning the law in hopped-up coupes.
13.Balentine, who founded Silver Trail Distillery, is the descendant of a long line of Kentucky moonshiners, according to its website.
14.While Loretta was the daughter of a coal miner, my mother was the daughter of a moonshiner.
15.One of her granddaddies was a Pentecostal preacher, the other a moonshiner, and neither seemed incompatible with Klan teachings.
16.It was unveiled in March at a party where a gourmet moonshiner, an early client, served thimble-size drinks.
17.Daniel had been a coal miner and a moonshiner.
18.First there’s that of Eliot Ness — a minor police celebrity fresh from defeating Al Capone in Chicago and seasoned from his sojourn battling moonshiners in Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee — who arrives in Cleveland in 1934.
19.They told Prillaman about the hardships moonshiners experienced, explaining they made liquor just to get by.
20.During Prohibition, Dubuque was labeled as a “bootleggers’ and moonshiners’ paradise,” according to a May 1925 Associated Press article published in the Telegraph Herald.