Get Free Checker

imbibing

[ UK /ɪmbˈa‍ɪbɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of consuming liquids

How To Use imbibing In A Sentence

  • Fans and family of Mr Howson should take heart; far from seeking solace in the bottle, the strongest stuff he is currently imbibing is tea.
  • For $7, tourists sail off for a day's imbibing of stomach-churning mulberry wine on a ramshackle boat, boasting the loudest sound-system in the country.
  • Shark fin is used as a thickener in Chinese shark fin soup, where part of the appeal is the idea of imbibing the strength and ferocity of the shark through its pulverized fins, an idea on par with thinking you'd stay warm if you ate polar bear fur. Carl Safina: Shark Attacked, Media Bites Rosie O'Donnell
  • They were used to imbibing enormous quantities of alcohol.
  • If your lawn is littered with empties the next morning, half of which you don't recall imbibing, then you've done your service to the Estonian state. Itching for Eestimaa
  • They considered it the raw product - still do, in fact - and the idea of imbibing it would have been and still is weird, and even a little barbaric, to them. My Vinegar & Hard Cider Experiment
  • As in the West, alcohol in Taiwanese culture is a social lubricant, the imbibing of which is seen by many as a measure of fortitude and spunk -- particularly if drinkers knock down a shot of hard liquor like kaoliang in one gulp. Archive 2006-06-01
  • Now, it's true there is no real danger involved in imbibing any of the fine, modern absinthes now on the market, if done in moderation. Boing Boing
  • They claim after imbibing two 33 centiliter bottles your blood alcohol level will still be the limit legal for driving. 2007 May archive at eternallycool.net
  • Plus lots of celebratory lunching and munching, vibing and imbibing in the empire of the senses.
View all