Soda
Encyclopedia

Food and beverages

  • Soft drink
    Soft drink
    A soft drink is a non-alcoholic beverage that typically contains water , a sweetener, and a flavoring agent...

    , a beverage product
  • Carbonated water
    Carbonated water
    Carbonated water is water into which carbon dioxide gas under pressure has been dissolved, a process that causes the water to become effervescent....

    , also known as "soda water"
  • Ice cream soda
    Ice cream soda
    An ice cream soda or float , coke float , or spider , is a beverage that consists of one or more scoops of ice cream in either a soft drink or in a mixture of flavored syrup and carbonated water.-Origins:The ice cream soda was invented by Robert M...

    , a dessert dish
  • Soda cracker, or saltine cracker
  • Soda bread
    Soda bread
    Soda bread is a variety of quick bread traditionally made in a variety of cuisines in which sodium bicarbonate is used as a raising agent rather than the more common yeast. The ingredients of traditional soda bread are flour, bread soda, salt, and buttermilk...

    , a variety of quick bread

Science, technology, and biology

  • A chemical compound containing sodium
    • Sodium carbonate
      Sodium carbonate
      Sodium carbonate , Na2CO3 is a sodium salt of carbonic acid. It most commonly occurs as a crystalline heptahydrate, which readily effloresces to form a white powder, the monohydrate. Sodium carbonate is domestically well-known for its everyday use as a water softener. It can be extracted from the...

      , washing soda or soda ash
    • Sodium bicarbonate
      Sodium bicarbonate
      Sodium bicarbonate or sodium hydrogen carbonate is the chemical compound with the formula Na HCO3. Sodium bicarbonate is a white solid that is crystalline but often appears as a fine powder. It has a slightly salty, alkaline taste resembling that of washing soda . The natural mineral form is...

      , baking soda
    • Sodium hydroxide, caustic soda
    • Sodium oxide
      Sodium oxide
      Sodium oxide is a chemical compound with the formula Na2O. It is used in ceramics and glasses, though not in a raw form. Treatment with water affords sodium hydroxide....

      , an alkali metal oxide
  • Salsola soda
    Salsola soda
    Salsola soda, more commonly known in English as Opposite Leaved Saltwort, Oppositeleaf Russian Thistle, or Barilla Plant, is a small , annual, succulent shrub that is native to the Mediterranean Basin...

    , saltwort plant, historical source of soda ash

Television, film, music, and comics

  • Soda Stereo
    Soda Stereo
    Soda Stereo were an Argentine rock band who are recognized as one of the most influential and important Latin American and Ibero-American bands of all time...

    , an Argentine rock band also known as "Soda"
  • Soda (comics), a popular Belgian comics series by Philippe Tome and Bruno Gazzotti
  • Tom "Soda" Gardocki, guitarist for the rock band Wax
    Wax (rock band)
    Wax is a Los Angeles, California based punk rock band that emerged during the pop punk resurgence of the early 1990s, and includes Joe Sib, Tom "Soda" Gardocki, Dave Georgeff, and Loomis Fall. The band is best known for their MTV buzz clip video "California," directed by Spike Jonze.-History:Wax...

  • SODA (série télévisé)

Video games

  • Soda, also referred to as Slate, a character from the Jet Set Radio
    Jet Set Radio
    is a video game for the Dreamcast, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega on June 29, 2000. A 2D version of the game was later released for Game Boy Advance; this version was developed by Vicarious Visions and published by THQ. Its sequel, Jet Set Radio Future was released 2 years later for...

     video game series
  • Soda Popinski, from the Punch-Out!!
    Punch-Out!!
    is a 1983–1984 boxing arcade game by Nintendo. It was the first in a series of successful Punch-Out!! games that produced an arcade sequel known as Super Punch-Out!!, a spin-off of the series titled Arm Wrestling, a highly popular version for the NES originally known as Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!,...

    series of games

Computers

  • ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms
  • Service-Oriented Development of Applications
    Service-Oriented Development of Applications
    In the field of software application development, service-oriented development of applications is a way of producing service-oriented architecture applications. Use of the term SODA was first used by the Gartner research firm....

  • Service Oriented Distributed Applications
    Service Oriented Distributed Applications
    A RESTful programming architecture that allows some services to be run on the client and some on the server. For example, a product can first be released as a browser application and then functionality moved module by module to the client application.-See also:...

  • Service Oriented Device Architecture
    Service Oriented Device Architecture
    The purpose of Service Oriented Device Architecture is to enable devices to be connected to a service-oriented architecture . Currently, developers connect enterprise services to an enterprise service bus using the various web service standards that have evolved since the advent of XML in 1998...

  • Simple Object Database Access

Other uses

  • Short-course Off-road Drivers Association, an off-road racing sanctioning body in the United States
  • Statement of Demonstrated Ability
    Statement of Demonstrated Ability
    A statement granted at the discretion of a Federal Air Surgeon to a person who is disqualified from obtaining a pilot's medical certification. Granted only if the disqualifying condition is static or non-progressive, and the person has been found capable of performing airman duties without...

    , a document for pilots
  • Soda Mountains
    Soda Mountains
    The Soda Mountains are located in the eastern Mojave Desert in San Bernardino County, California, USA. The range lies to the north of Interstate 15 west of the town of Baker.-Geography:...

    , in the eastern Mojave Desert in California, USA
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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