boozer

[ US /ˈbuzɝ/ ]
[ UK /bˈuːzɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who drinks alcohol to excess habitually
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How To Use boozer In A Sentence

  • Welcome to the Wild, Wild West: The old Fowlers Pub, located at the top of Soi Skaw Beach (off Second Road), is being refurbished and will soon re-open as a Wild West-style theme boozer and noshery with hamburgers being a specialty.
  • This is a proper old boisterous boozer that just happens to serve fabulous food, and has been doing so for the past ten years. Times, Sunday Times
  • When he gets home, he buys himself a new flat and a Porsche, splashes out on new clobber and heads at midday to the boozer.
  • But they would visit more if boozers served good food, had better seats, entertainment and showed less sport on the telly. The Sun
  • It was once a speakeasy and just before prohibition was repealed a bunch of boozers were massacred by cops during a raid.
  • However, I fear they are retreating, and minority indulgences such as cribbage are going the same way as dominoes, shove ha'penny, bar billiards, and the very jolly, unpretentious boozers in which they used to be played day and night. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • At the risk of merely confirming Stephen's description of the Brit boozer, I've been drunk or been with drunken people in most parts of Europe and on the whole it has been fun.
  • Time is also being called on the British boozer. The Sun
  • The whole experience reminded me of my old man when he used to take us in the local boozer's beer garden and I'd have a cheeky slurp of this type of beer when he'd nipped off to ‘see a man about a dog’.
  • In fact, they seem determined to recreate the bawdy, bumptious atmosphere of a redneck boozer.
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