Noun(1) a chronic drinker
Verb(1) fill with sublime emotion,tickle pink (exhilarate is obsolete in this usage),make drunk (with alcoholic drinks),become drunk or drink excessively,intoxicate(2) fill with sublime emotion(3) tickle pink (exhilarate is obsolete in this usage)(4) make drunk (with alcoholic drinks)(5) become drunk or drink excessively(6) intoxicate
Noun(1) a chronic drinker
Verb(1) fill with sublime emotion,tickle pink (exhilarate is obsolete in this usage),make drunk (with alcoholic drinks),become drunk or drink excessively,intoxicate(2) fill with sublime emotion(3) tickle pink (exhilarate is obsolete in this usage)(4) make drunk (with alcoholic drinks)(5) become drunk or drink excessively(6) intoxicate
(1) We hooked up with the wedding party towards the inebriate end of the evening - my word, did we ever.(2) Moreover, it can give one a feeling of energy, power and strength that can last for days after the inebriate effects have worn off.(3) To that end, if anyone wants an inebriate Santa staying on their floor sometime in December, do let me know.(4) After all, self-discipline was to be the dominant trait of both the proper slave master and the reformed inebriate .(5) The casual drinkers stumbled out to be replaced by the more sinister silent sort of inebriate - the kind with cold, mad eyes.(6) Then, with all the strength she possessed, she threw the inebriate onto her shoulders as if he was nothing more than a mink stole.(7) He is an habitual inebriate but not an habitual drunkard.(8) The tree trunk has become a useful crutch for the inebriate .(9) In 1913 the London County Council carried a resolution to close its inebriate reformatory, Farmfield.(10) An inebriate Glaswegian was ahead of me in the queue.(11) The hitherto silent island of Naxos has startlingly become populated with fauns and maenads and sileni and old Silenus himself swaying inebriate on his donkey.(12) Thoroughly fed up with the whole affair, I cut my losses and my inebriate courage disappeared.(13) Prominent candidates are denounced as renegade and inebriate .(14) They are political or philosophical, merrily inebriate or sententiously sober.(15) So exuberant, perhaps a tad inebriated but almost always good natured and fun.(16) We were two slightly inebriated gentlemen trundling along on a Sunday evening.