The short answer is no.
Potable water is a treated water able to be drinked but it is not a very pure water.
Ethanol is a colourless liquid.
Ethanol
Akali metals reduce ethanol to ethanoxides- they react with ethanol.
'Potable' is usually used as such, referring mainly to water.
Denatured ethanol retails for in the vicinity of 3 bucks a gallon, which is extremely cheap as chemicals go. Potable ethanol is several times as expensive, mainly because of taxes; I recall (in 1980) being told by a distiller and supplier of industrial ethanol that they immediately denatured most of their product because otherwise the taxes amounted to about $9 per gallon, and that the bookkeeping, security, etc. required probably added another dollar per gallon to the final cost.
The water fountain had potable water
Hard water is potable (drinkable).
Potable is from the Latin word "potare" which means "to drink." The term potable water refers to water that is safe to drink.
Tap water is potable, or drinking, water. When it is introduced into a boiler or other non-drinking resources, it becomes NON potable
No. Once you pump anything but potable water with that pump, it's not good for pumping potable water.
Not exactly. Water that comes into your house is potable[ safe to drink] but you pay for it.
Comestible (fit to eat or drink), potable is fit to drink
Scotch
The word 'potable' is sometimes seen near water supplies in France. It means that it is drinking water.
The word "potable" means that something is suitable for drinking. One example would be "potable water" which means that this water is safe to drink. The word was first used in 1565.