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3 answers

nectar contains more pulp

2006-07-12 05:03:21 · answer #1 · answered by mc 6 · 2 0

Nectar, on a drink can, is almost never 100% juice, it will have water and sweeteners.

The confusion is that nectar as a natural thing is basically the honey from different flowers, very sugary liquid to attract animals to help with pollination. You can think of some fruits as flowers, but that is not the case here.

Two kinds of nectar that are different but close: beverage industry term and botany term.

2006-07-12 04:48:40 · answer #2 · answered by The Quicker Picker Upper 1 · 0 0

According to Dictionary.com:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/nectar
One of the definitions is that a Nectar is juice from various fruits (#2 on the third entry). I think companies use the word Nectar mainly as a marketing ploy because it sounds better than juice, though personally I tend to think of Juice as being more watery, like something you get from a citrus fruit, and nectar being a little thicker, like it was pureed from peaches, nectarines, or any other non-citrus fruit that you can't really 'squeeze' juice out of.
They are, in essence, identical.

2006-07-12 04:54:42 · answer #3 · answered by qetyl 3 · 0 0

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