inebriation

[ UK /ɪnˌiːbɹɪˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a temporary state resulting from excessive consumption of alcohol
  2. habitual intoxication; prolonged and excessive intake of alcoholic drinks leading to a breakdown in health and an addiction to alcohol such that abrupt deprivation leads to severe withdrawal symptoms
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How To Use inebriation In A Sentence

  • Every day we continue to be fat, dumb, and happy with our IANA private ranges and doing port address translation at the firewall is another day further ensconced in the inebriation of IPv4. Five-year plan: 8 problems IT must solve
  • To get in the right headspace, he started working on tracks at his uptown home, removing himself from downtown rock-scene distractions and choosing isolation over inebriation.
  • Sadly though, our binge culture does pressurise young people into believing that inebriation is essential for enjoyment.
  • A mango sorbet served with a very fruity Sauternes closes the dinner, and we retire to the lounge in various degrees of inebriation, drinking beautifully roasted and percolated coffee, while the chefs pack up in the kitchen.
  • Meanwhile "inebriation in all its most brutal and disgraceful shapes" takes its moral toll upon the masses in the form of vile oaths, imprecations, naughty songs, and pervasive "ribaldry"; thus procedures that are intended to facilitate public participation actually create an "earthly hell" on the deck of the outlaw vessel (405). Love and Merit in the Maritime Historical Novel: Cooper and Scott
  • Slide 25: Clinical course in acute ethylene glycol intoxication 30 minutes to 12 hours Central nervous system Inebriation euphoria ataxia slurred speech drowsiness irritation restlessness disorientation Gastrointestinal Nausea and vomiting Metabolic Elevated osmolal gap Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Inebriation, if not the wisest way to console and repress, is at least an opportune way to live with the knowledge that it is impossible to win affection. 'Pleasure is now, and ought to be, your business': Stealing Sexuality in Jane Austen's _Juvenilia_
  • Many drinkers plunge gladly into inebriation as an escape from reality.
  • He was in an advanced state of inebriation.
  • Julia listened to his retelling of the exchange, hoping that his inebriation would blind him to her indifference. THE HELLBOUND HEART
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