n
Alternative form of bar crawl [Synonym of pub crawl]
n
(obsolete, slang) A very small bottle.
n
(chiefly UK, idiomatic) Fun times; pleasure and leisure.
n
A funnel used to rapidly drink large quantities of alcoholic beverage.
n
A drinking game in which players sit at opposite ends of a table and attempt to throw a die into their opponent's cup.
n
(bowling) A frame in which the bowler who performs worst is assigned the forfeit of buying beer for the other players.
n
(US, slang) A drinking game in which players attempt to throw a ping pong ball into cups of beer.
n
(Australia, colloquial) A young woman employed to serve alcoholic beverages to the audience at cricket matches, often dressed in a skimpy costume.
n
(uncountable) A drinking game that involves laying fifteen playing cards out in a pyramid, and drinking based on the cards laid out.
n
The drinking game of beer pong.
n
(Scotland) A wooden drinking-cup or other dish.
v
(Scotland, obsolete) To pour a drink (for).
n
(Ireland, slang) a pint of Guinness (or similar) having too much head on top.
n
(US) The owner of a bodega (shop that sells alcohol).
n
(chiefly Canada, idiomatic) A nightclub or bar, especially one which operates illegally or is otherwise disreputable.
n
(Britain) A brief trip from Britain to France and/or Belgium in order to buy alcohol (or tobacco) in bulk quantities without paying excise duty.
n
(archaic, British slang) A pub; a public house; a tavern.
n
(Australia, New Zealand, informal) A shop that sells alcoholic beverages.
n
(archaic) A drink based on brandyᵂ.
v
Alternative form of birle [(Scotland, obsolete) To pour a drink (for).]
n
(Northern England, Scotland) A keg.
n
(UK, slang, archaic) A communal session of drinking alcohol.
n
(archaic) A person who drinks alcohol.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To supply with cups of wine.
n
(Cuphead fandom slang) A beverage container-headed alter ego or self-insert character created by a fan.
n
(UK, dialect, plural only) An afternoon drinking session.
v
(transitive) To take in (a liquid), in any manner; to suck up; to absorb; to imbibe.
n
(UK) the time when customers in a public house should finish their drinks, before closing time.
n
The time to begin social drinking.
n
(Cambridge University slang) The activity of fining in general, as part of a meal or drinking game; commonly associated with swaps; very similar to sconcing at Oxford University.
n
(historical) A whisky smuggler.
n
A team-based drinking game in which players attempt to flip the cup after drinking so that it lands with its rim downward.
n
(obsolete) A cask, a large barrel for wine.
n
A drinking game in which players in a circle take turns to say "fuzzy duck" (or, after the direction of play is reversed, "ducky fuzz") and must drink if they make a mistake.
n
(archaic, UK, slang) A pint pot.
n
(UK, slang) Porter or other beer, or by extension any drinkable alcohol.
n
(dated, slang) A commercial establishment where alcoholic beverages are sold and consumed, especially one which is shabby or downmarket.
n
(Canada, US) A cup of drink purchased in an establishment to be taken away and drunk elsewhere.
v
(obsolete) To drug (liquor).
n
(obsolete, slang) A jar for holding liquor.
n
A drinking ritual in which the drinker is hoisted aloft to drink directly from a keg of beer while performing something like a handstand.
v
(obsolete, UK, thieves' cant) To drink.
n
(UK, Ireland) An illegal but widely-tolerated invitation-only gathering in a British pub, after the end of licensing hours, to allow regular customers the opportunity to enjoy further drinking time.
n
(chiefly Scotland) The first alcoholic drink of the day; a morning draught.
n
(slang) An online drinking game, typically involving a person uploading a video of themselves drinking a pint of an alcoholic beverage (most commonly beer) in one gulp, then nominating two or more others to do the same.
n
(archaic) A small amount of beer, wine, or other liquid, of perhaps 1/8 pint in volume.
n
(dated outside dialects) A small measure of spirits equivalent to a gill.
n
(UK) A small quantity of a strong alcoholic beverage.
n
(obsolete, slang) A meal eaten at a tavern bar while standing up.
n
(archaic) A seller or drinker of beer.
n
(in combinations, UK, slang) The drinking of a certain number of pints of beer
n
(Ireland, informal) A man who habitually drinks pints of beer, or is revered for his way of drinking them.
n
(Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, Western Australia) A serving of 140 millilitres of beer (formerly 5 fl oz); a quarter pint.
n
(Ireland, countable, by extension) An unlicensed drinking establishment selling illegally produced Irish whiskey.
n
Alternative spelling of poteen. [(Ireland, countable, uncountable) Illegally produced Irish whiskey; moonshine.]
v
(idiomatic, informal, derogatory) To spend time drinking alcohol at the bar in a pub.
v
(idiomatic) to visit, and drink in, numerous pubs or bars in succession.
n
A commonly played university drinking game in North America.
v
To pretend to drink early on so that, as the night draws on, one can drink everybody else "under the table".
n
(UK, Australia, New Zealand, slang) A round of drinks in a pub; the turn to pay the shot or scot; an act of paying for a round of drinks.
n
A small mouthful of drink
n
(informal) A little sip; less than a serving of some particular drink
v
(dialect) Alternative form of sipple [(archaic, transitive) To take frequent sips; tipple.]
n
(obsolete, rare) A drink of something; a draft.
n
(UK, dialect, archaic) A vessel of drink.
n
(informal) Alternative form of snootful (“ingested quantity of alcoholic beverage”) [(informal) A noseful.]
n
Alternative form of speakeasies
n
(historical) A place where hard liquor is stored or sold.
n
(slang) An alcoholic drink taken to fortify oneself.
n
(slang, uncountable, archaic) Credit offered to a customer, especially for alcoholic drink.
adv
(obsolete) According to the rules of an old drinking game in which the drinker upturned the empty cup and had to drink more if the remaining droplets spilled beyond the edge of his fingernail.
n
(by extension) A long draught from a drink.
n
(historical) A working men's club conducted under religious influences, as an alternative to drinking in the saloon.
n
A drinking game in which one player puts their thumb on the table, or other surface. The last of the other players to put their thumb on it has to drink
n
Alternative form of tim-whiskey [(historical) A kind of carriage drawn by one horse.]
n
(Australia, slang) A can of beer.
n
(slang) A final portion of a beverage drink, often with coffee drinks or alcoholic mixes, that will fill a cup to the top.
n
(colloquial, now rare) Alternative form of tosspot [(colloquial, now rare) A drunkard, one who drinks alcohol frequently.]
n
(obsolete) A fisherman who uses a trink.
n
(Australia, slang) A tin can containing beer.
adj
(UK, dialect) Alternative form of unked [(UK, dialect, archaic) odd; strange]
n
(Scotland) A large draught of any liquid.
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