A person who drinks alcohol to excess habitually.
A person who is addicted to drinking alcohol excessively.
Sinônimos
Examples for "drunk"
Examples for "drunk"
1The discordant vocalising of the drunk and disorderly in the next cell.
2They've become power-drunk and don't want to let go of that power.
3In all the bodies in which I have drunk, I sought you.
4One had the face of a savage; the other was half drunk.
5By two in the afternoon she was drunk in bed, and crying.
1The only thing in his favor was that he was a drunkard.
2The drunkard got to his feet again; but the chauffeur did not.
3The woman was an inveterate drunkard; they had been separated for years.
4This extraordinary tolerance of the drunkard was something new in his partner.
5Pitt was a drunkard-andPitt was the most remarkable statesman in England.
1The boozer gets out of the game as certainly as the bonehead.
2You drink alone and you're just a boozer, know what I mean?
3Tom had said the man had no money and was a boozer.
4The subject of this review is a pretty ordinary suburban boozer.
5The traditional wet-led boozer is suffering, while food-led pubs and restaurants are growing.
6I was a boozer myself, but I cut it all out.
7I'm not a big boozer, but I'd really like a drink.
8This time, I'm darned if the old boozer hasn't sworn off!
9After much negotiation, Meaney's distraught Irish boozer accepts the offer.
10I'll have you know the Horseshoe is no boozer, sir.
11Even a Yokohama bar-maid will fight shy of a boozer.
12Why are they succeeding when the traditional boozer is struggling?
13With that, I trotted off, alone, into thronging crowds of the Friday night boozer.
14The man is a boozer and a frak-up, and everyone in CIC knows it.
15It isn't a crime, isn't only being a good boozer.
16What do you mean by abusing people in that way?-youold useless boozer, you!