Concept cluster: Drink > Alcohol and drinking
v
To impregnate with wormwood.
n
(slang, UK, Australia) An alcoholic.
n
Synonym of Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
n
A measure of the alcoholic content of something
n
(dated) One suffering from alcoholism; an alcoholic.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of alcohol.
n
(obsolete) A drinking companion.
n
(informal) An alcoholic.
n
Alternative spelling of alkie [(informal) An alcoholic.]
n
The study of drinking and its preparations, and history.
n
(US, slang, chiefly New England) High spirits.
n
(informal) A beer belly.
n
(idiomatic) An aggressive attitude resulting from consumption of an alcoholic beverage.
n
(colloquial) A trip made, often late at night, to obtain beer or other alcoholic beverages.
n
A large, usually boisterous party, as for college students, club members, or soldiers, at which beer is the sole or principal beverage and is consumed in large quantities.
n
(slang) An alcoholic who drinks a lot of beer.
n
Alternative spelling of beer bong [A funnel used to rapidly drink large quantities of alcoholic beverage.]
n
Alternative spelling of beer gut [(informal) A beer belly.]
n
(US, dated, slang) Any consumable liquid: soup, soda, alcoholic drinks, etc.
n
(obsolete, UK, thieves' cant) Good beer.
v
(intransitive, archaic) To drink heartily; to tipple.
n
One given to drinking alcoholic beverages too freely; a tippler.
adj
Given to or marked by the consumption of alcoholic drink.
n
(archaic, UK, dialect) An invitation of friends to drink ale at a poor man's house, and there to contribute in charity for his relief.
n
(UK, slang, obsolete) Beer.
n
(colloquial) Kombucha.
n
(colloquial, countable, archaic) A session of drinking alcohol; a drinking party.
n
(UK, slang, derogatory) An alcoholic.
n
(slang) An alcoholic.
n
Alternative spelling of boozing ken [(archaic, British slang) A pub; a public house; a tavern.]
n
(Cockney rhyming slang) arse
n
(slang, derogatory) A woman in a nightclub who feigns interest in people ordering bottle service in order to get free drinks.
n
(slang, historical) An alcoholic malt liquor, especially beer.
n
(Ohio, slang) The practice of consuming alcohol while canoeing.
n
A large draught of liquor.
n
(UK, slang, obsolete) Any very weak drink.
v
(obsolete, intransitive) To sell wine or victuals.
v
To say "cheers" as a toast.
n
One who chugs a drink, especially an alcoholic drink.
v
(transitive) To treat (a person) to cocktails.
n
(slang, humorous) An alcoholic drink, sometimes drunk as a hangover "cure".
n
A fellow drinker; one who accompanies another person in drinking alcohol.
n
(idiomatic, slang) An empty container, usually a bottle or can which contained an alcoholic beverage.
n
(South Africa, slang) An imprecise measure of alcohol; a dash.
n
A dose (of medicine, alcohol, etc.)
n
One who sells distilled liquors by the dram or glass.
n
Alcoholic beverages in general.
v
(simile) To drink something (especially an alcoholic drink) easily and in large quantities.
n
(chiefly Britain and Australia) A person who engages in drink-driving.
n
(informal) A prolonged session of drinking alcohol.
n
(slang) A pub.
n
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: The least age at which one is permitted by law to drink alcoholic beverages.
n
(games) A game (often a logic or memory game) which involves the drinking of alcohol, usually as a penalty for making mistakes, as the intoxication makes the game harder to play.
n
A song which celebrates or accompanies the drinking of alcohol.
n
(informal) An alcoholic beverage.
n
(slang) A craving for food as a result of alcohol consumption.
adj
Applied to various spicy stir-fried dishes in Asian cuisine.
n
(rare) drunkenness
n
Obsolete spelling of drunkenness [A state of being drunk.]
n
(idiomatic) The courage or bravado induced by alcohol.
n
(Cockney rhyming slang) Telephone.
n
The practice of pouring vodka through the eye socket, falsely claimed to increase the rate of alcohol absorption.
adj
(archaic) Drunk; tipsy.
n
(Ireland, colloquial) A person found by the police consuming alcohol on licensed premises outside opening hours
v
(archaic, transitive) To make drunk, especially on gin.
n
(US, obsolete, Prohibition) A person who wears a hip flask (of alcohol).
n
(obsolete) A hangover.
adj
(archaic) Of ale or beer: very strong.
n
one who imbibes, who drinks, especially alcoholic beverages.
n
Enough liquor to make a person noticeably drunk; a skinful.
v
(colloquial) To consume an alcoholic drink.
n
A priest or religious official who conducts a libation ritual, in which a drink is poured as an offering to a divinity or ancestor.
n
(idiomatic) Alcohol drunk to induce a feeling of courage.
v
(intransitive) To drink liquor, usually to excess.
v
(informal, transitive) To cause someone to drink liquor, usually to excess.
n
(slang) An alcoholic drink.
adj
Of an alcoholic beverage, having a lower alcohol content than normal.
n
(obsolete) Drink.
n
A tippler; a drinker of alcohol.
v
(idiomatic) To indicate what type of alcoholic beverage one wishes to be served.
n
A beverage drunk before bed that is usually alcoholic.
adj
(archaic, humorous) Peculiarly strong and good; said of ale or liquor.
n
A final drink before one leaves.
n
(colloquial) One or more servings too many of alcohol, leading to drunkenness; one too many.
n
A spirit possessing a higher proportion of alcohol than proof spirit.
n
Liquid courage.
n
(often in the plural) The act of drinking.
n
(obsolete, rare) A drinker.
v
To pour a libation or a liquid from a container, particularly from a forty of malt liquor, as an act of remembrance for someone deceased.
v
(UK, university slang, humorous) To pre-drink.
adj
(of alcoholic liquors) Being of a certain standard as to alcohol content.
n
(colloquial) An alcoholic beverage for the ride, for consumption while one is driving.
n
An official ceremony over drinks.
adj
(Britain, colloquial, dated) Strange, peculiar.
n
(archaic) A grog-blossom.
n
(obsolete, humorous) A drinking vessel.
n
An unlicensed drinking establishment, especially in Ireland, Scotland, and South Africa.
v
To pour or serve wine or beer; to skink.
n
(UK, slang, obsolete) A glass of spirits drunk quickly in one go.
v
To taste the liquor of; to drink out of.
n
(obsolete) A drink.
n
One who serves liquor; a tapster.
n
(slang, dated) A drink bought by one person for another.
n
The final remnant left in a liquor bottle.
n
(Ireland, informal) food or nonalcoholic beverages consumed before or during a bout of drinking to slow down the onset of drunkenness
n
Someone who only drinks alcohol when with acquaintances who are drinking.
v
(nautical, idiomatic) To have an alcoholic drink.
adj
(alcoholic beverages, obsolete) Clear, free of dregs and lees; old and strong.
n
A drinker, especially one who drinks slowly (i.e., one who sups).
n
Alternative form of tanglelegs (“alcoholic liquor”) [(archaic, US) Alcoholic liquor.]
n
(slang) An alcoholic beverage.
n
(Cockney rhyming slang) An alcoholic drink.
n
(slang) Any alcoholic drink.
n
(countable) A person, group, or notable object to which a salutation with alcohol is made; a person or group held in similar esteem.
n
One who toasts (engages in salute while drinking alcohol).
n
(informal) A drink with three portions of alcohol.
n
A person clutching a drink in each hand.
adj
Having a lower alcohol content than proof spirit.
v
(transitive) To toast, to drink to the health of another.
n
wassail; revelry
adj
(retronym) Permitting alcoholic beverages.
n
(dated, slang) intoxicating liquors
v
(intransitive) To get drunk on wine.
n
(figuratively) The consumption of alcohol; drinking; alcohol as a drink.
n
(figuratively, by extension, derogatory) A drunkard, a wino.
n
Alternative form of wininess [The quality of being winy; drunkenness.]

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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