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[ UK /ɪnˈiːbɹɪˌe‍ɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ˌɪˈnɛbɹiˌeɪtəd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. stupefied or excited by a chemical substance (especially alcohol)
    helplessly inebriated
    a noisy crowd of intoxicated sailors

How To Use inebriated In A Sentence

  • In her inebriated state, she was ready to agree to anything.
  • He was inebriated by his phenomenal success
  • Where the government are getting it wrong is that they seem unable to differentiate between the mild irritant of inebriated and loud youth and the frightening increase in violent and brutal crime.
  • I banged on the door, too inebriated and stupefied to think.
  • I think Percy Smith was strongest at coon songs, and Trail sang all sorts, and G. and Kirke played accompaniments, whilst the writer picked out his own to a chantie respecting the procedure to be taken with an inebriated mariner -- such a merry evening! From Edinburgh to India & Burmah
  • In her inebriated state, she was ready to agree to anything.
  • What he had not anticipated when he chose the slightly inebriated, seriously overweight woman attempting to hail a cab, was how attached she would be to her pocketbook.
  • His poor sister, shamed by her brother's drunkenness had moved far and away where she oughtn't to have news of Masdy's daily inebriated activities. Masdy's Silver
  • Rather legendarily, our leading man arrived for the final night's call 40 minutes late and still inebriated, but was word-perfect throughout the production.
  • Not the least of his indignities was his flamboyant and often inebriated wife, Martha, who dominated the capital's gossip columns -- and political columns -- more than any political spouse of his time. Reconsidering John Mitchell
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