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How To Use Boozy In A Sentence

  • Mind you, for the first part of the last century Wales's away match against Scotland was traditionally the fabled weekend for the working classes down there – with no end of night-special excursion trains steaming up north through the witching hours to deposit all down Princes Street at dawn, a bleary throng seething contentedly with high expectations as well as, it must be said, boozy, beery odours. Dragon dreams of Barry John, Gareth Edwards and springtime in Paris | Frank Keating
  • Once you've had your fill of boozy friskiness, cool down with a visit to Aros, the city's brand-new museum of modern art.
  • I like to use a boozy, wet mincemeat and a buttery short pastry. Times, Sunday Times
  • This opens with a very fizzy burst, and turns immediately into a kind of boozy floral. Three For The Road From The Outlet Mall
  • None of the nasty sideways glances or boozy staggers of my week before, just relaxed and happy people doing their thing.
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  • Standing under a tent for a cocktail reception getting schmoozy and boozy?
  • TWO men were yesterday found guilty of harassing a dolphin on a boozy early-morning swim. The Sun
  • But there won't be a repeat of last year's boozy antics if he does get the gong. The Sun
  • The afternoon session is the sweetest because it exists as stolen time; a kind of boozy twilight in which time seems both suspended and fleeting. Spectator Live
  • But there won't be a repeat of last year's boozy antics if he does get the gong. The Sun
  • She also experienced reps regularly taking young doctors out for boozy meals in an effort to win their favour.
  • A drunken man who attacked a black cab after a boozy night out has been ordered to pay £648 in compensation.
  • He also knows Jose will roust the new guy from bed if he's overslept or had a boozy weekend. Ray Suarez: Why America Now?
  • Will the Awards be a boozy night? The Sun
  • The Globes have long been known as a boozy, less formal affair than other awards shows such as the Oscars. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • For the oyster veloute, a Boozy Beginning made with Patron Silver and anejo tequilas, Ultimat Vodka and house-made dry vermouth. D.C. rocks the Patron Express
  • The friend you invited to your boozy Christmas lunch is a recovering alcoholic.
  • Only minutes before office workers performed boozy slow dances around this suburban pub to chart hits.
  • There is a reason the title character in The Drowsy Chaperone is a little sleepy: You could also call her the "boozy" or "tipsy" chaperone. Kentucky.com: Homepage
  • ‘Every sign has its keynote flavours,’ she says of the idea, which ‘came out of a boozy lunch with the manager’.
  • Specializing in such life-threatening dishes as deep-fried macaroni and cheese and bread pudding made from Krispy Kreme donuts, Ms. Deen is high-voltage Dixie kitsch, a cartoon version of the kind of brassy, boozy aunt that the other aunts always refer to as a "hoot. A Recipe for Escapism
  • I suppose she's right, I think, as I leave Harris Manchester College for a delicious and boozy lunch on the High Street with my distinguished student.
  • This is a horribly patronising movie that makes Dublin in 1967 look like a theme-park of amiable drunken wastrels and boozy squawking women in headscarves and ankle socks.
  • The all-night costume balls, boozy dinners and back-room business deals are things of legend in this city once known as the Paris of the Orient.
  • A boozy lunch, you make a pass and embarrass yourself. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a boozy place... some 600 hard-rock miners lived down the road... and the menu featured fried pupfish from the nearby Amargosa River. Richard Bangs: Death Valley Daze, Part I
  • The 27-year-old blurted out his link to royalty to fellow apprentices over a boozy lunch. The Sun
  • Happily, Adams did not incorporate the boozy string portamenti that Elgar deployed in his 1920 recording of the work -- another sign that a composer may not always be the best conductor of his own music. In performance: NSO with John Adams
  • Although not big and boozy (only 12.5% on the label), the main grape is tannat, which makes wines that are often opaque in their inky purpleness with tons o’ tannins. Arretxea Irouleguy and Tissot Poulsard - geek out, winter or fall | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • his boozy drinking companions
  • someone else I think is hot but shouldn't coz he's a yellow cartoon sea-sponge ; 'tis the season to be fat and boozy! fa-la la-la laaaa la-la la laaaa! Don we now our gay apparel
  • Given the band started out from boozy ad-lib jam sessions, this has all been rather unexpected.
  • She kept him topped up with bottles of wine and they spent hours over boozy lunches. The Sun
  • The songs have a loungy, boozy, mid-60s vibe with some country flavor. Cliff Chenfeld: The Best Music of 2011
  • He was replaced by a boozy singer-guitarist who announced in heavily accented French that he was a purveyor of Irish love ballads, then blithely launched into Leonard Cohen's Sisters of Mercy.
  • All said he should be stood down after he was charged - not convicted but charged - with the sexual assault of a 17-year-old girl following a "boozy" season launch last Friday. The Roar - Your Sports Opinion
  • But rock and roll, which used to signify teenage rebellion against such conformities as school, is more at home in boozy clubs and throbbing arenas. Seattle's Purple Haze
  • It's quite a dark comedy and anyone who's ever been on a boozy night out in a club like this will recognise the characters.
  • The cheese fondue was seriously boozy and came with lots of chopped up bread for dipping.
  • That means style queens are going to feel a lot more comfortable in New Town's urbane outposts than the boozy, backslapping pubs of Old Town.
  • But their boozy antics often led to injuries. The Sun
  • I like to use a boozy, wet mincemeat and a buttery short pastry. Times, Sunday Times
  • However, a mention of the conundrum during a boozy dinner party provoked an interesting and lively debate, so perhaps you might also like to raise the matter over the Sunday roast.
  • If, back on that boozy tour in 1993, someone had told us that we would one day be mobbed outside that hotel after winning the World Cup, we would probably have bought him a pint, slapped him on the back and told him he was a very, very funny man.
  • Nowadays drinking in most workplaces is frowned upon, and the boozy culture of Westminster increasingly appears a dangerous anachronism.
  • Ms. McWHORTER: Gary Thomas Rowe, the kind of boozy-looking guy. Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama - The climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution
  • That is largely because in number after number, a dream ensemble led by a lithe and charismatic Aaron Tveit as Frank, Tom Wopat as his con man, boozy dad, and Norbert Leo Butz as Carl Hanratty, the shleppy cop who takes him in, dazzles. Regina Weinreich: Con Me If You Can: The Broadway Musical
  • The boozy ways of the newsdesk were withering away anyway. Times, Sunday Times
  • The warriors made quite a fuss over Sara as she moved among them, making boozy offers and launching flagrant gropes.
  • The media mogul booted him off over his boozy antics and called him a horror of a human being. The Sun
  • Given the choice, she would rather spend her time helping tackle crime than out on a boozy tour of the town centre.
  • thick boozy singing
  • Waits sang about the boozy netherworld of urban America.
  • This Loire Valley style red would probably severely disappoint the followers of the afore-mentioned "boozy" reds, but Cab Franc, and specifically the T23, is what we do best. Red, With Envy: Assessing 2007 Finger Lakes Reds
  • For some campers, a boozy night will come back to bite them. Times, Sunday Times
  • A lifestyle of heavy drinking became ingrained, and was made worse by his working environment, where boozy lunches were the norm.
  • Allen's an investigator there, a boozy, chauvinistic hotshot who solves all the tough cases with the help of his connections on the street.
  • The plans, which include curtailing boozy social events and offering better support for students with drink problems, contrast with the heavy drinking culture prevalent among students in Scotland's medical schools.
  • The demise of the boozy lunch is one more sign of the U. S. influence, which pervades Mexico's middle-class.
  • This appears to be a token effort after a series of boozy nights to rein in his drinking. Times, Sunday Times
  • Young women who have yet to discover what price they may well pay for their boozy nights on the town. The Sun
  • That could end up being a boozy night - and hungover Friday. The Sun
  • Given the band started out from boozy ad-lib jam sessions, this has all been rather unexpected.
  • The Marx Brothers stow away in "Monkey Business" (1931), and a soda fountain is sabotaged with boozy "lemon syrup" in "Caught Plastered" (1931). On Screen: Rare Comedy for Cinephiles
  • Thus the new band is relieved of having to play the old Tull chestnuts that work well as boozy, big-room sing-alongs: " Aqualung, " " Too Old to Rock ' n ' Roll, " " Locomotive Breath " and others from the band ' s 43-year-old catalog. Anderson Avoids the Late-Career Tull
  • In her twenties she worked as a director of a property company in London, existing on coffee, Danish pastries, convenience foods and long boozy lunches.
  • In a sample of 12 foreign visits, boozy councillors and officers drank their way through £1,060 of alcohol and spent £430 on phone calls.
  • She admits to the odd bout of boozy indulgence like the rest of us.
  • But there won't be a repeat of last year's boozy antics if he does get the gong. The Sun
  • A mum today launched a campaign to hammer home the dangers of binge drinking after her schoolboy son nearly died following a boozy night out.
  • One in ten workers suffers three times a month from a boozy night before. The Sun
  • TWO men were yesterday found guilty of harassing a dolphin on a boozy early-morning swim. The Sun
  • But Ray J fans take solace: I'm guessing we'll see plenty more of the title bachelor following the show's reunion special, when we'll likely witness the inevitable break-up between Ray J and his boozy chosen one. Entertainment Weekly's PopWatch
  • The often loutish, boozy image was replaced with players such as Jonny Wilkinson and Jason Robinson, who looked as though a dash of lime in their soda water was enough excitement for one night.
  • The copy being sold was first bought by an early paleobotanist, Henry Witham, "subscriber number 11", after an apparently very boozy dinner. World's most expensive book comes up for sale
  • Police now have more powers than ever to crack down on boozy rowdy behaviour.
  • Anthony Cronin's telling portrait of the time, Dead as Doornails, portrays the boozy pub-centred milieu as a place where the attitude and drinking seemed nihilistic and alcoholism and underachievement were rife.
  • The boozy lunch was much more valuable in commerce than it is given credit for. Times, Sunday Times
  • TWO men were yesterday found guilty of harassing a dolphin on a boozy early-morning swim. The Sun
  • Sake and shochu, traditional Japanese drinks that were once derided as old-fashioned and the tipple of boozy middle-aged men, are enjoying a boom among trendy young drinkers.
  • Some of the questioners seem to be hung up on the boozy nosh-up.
  • But ask yourself whom you'd rather have met for a boozy lunch. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'nymphomaniac', 'prostitute', 'boozy' and so forth seemed - though stirred by the play - to be completely off the track, or nearly so. The Sheila Variations
  • Since the early 1800s New Orleans welcomed those with same-sex attractions into a sea of fabulous architecture, boozy decadent affairs, outrageous parades, fabulous costumes, and gender-bending.
  • The worst thing OK, maybe not the worst about LiLo's descent into boozy sluthood is that she actually IS a halfway decent actress and a halfway decent singer. What do you want, a medal?
  • When we first see the rooster, he's gargling some water, and he's bleary-eyed; obviously, he just got up after a long boozy night.
  • See, puff pastry is exactly the kind of buttery, rich, snackable food you want to put in front of people when they're holding a glass of something boozy or bubbly.
  • In a margarita the flavors are quite similar; it really comes down to how "boozy" you want your drink to taste (bear in mind that a stronger-tasting drink may be less likely to be heedlessly guzzled). Chris Hall: The Perfect Margarita
  • It will take decades—at least—for any serious dent to be made in Britain and Scotland's boozy culture.

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