[
UK
/pˈaɪnt/
]
[ US /ˈpaɪnt/ ]
[ US /ˈpaɪnt/ ]
NOUN
- a United States liquid unit equal to 16 fluid ounces; two pints equal one quart
- a British imperial capacity measure (liquid or dry) equal to 4 gills or 568.26 cubic centimeters
- a United States dry unit equal to 0.5 quart or 33.6 cubic inches
How To Use pint In A Sentence
- A couple of blokes tried to glass me in the face with a pint tumbler.
- He initially admitted having had three pints of beer but then blamed his drunkenness on the cake. The Sun
- In the days of yore when beer in pubs was served only in pints or quarts, the serving wenches had to keep mental tabs on who drank pints and who drank quarts to get it right when collecting payment.
- Hence my recommendation that you have half a pint of skimmed milk daily. Times, Sunday Times
- I took the pint mug of white earthenware from the shelf behind her. Prisons and Prisoners: Some Personal Experiences
- Purposefully moraceous make money work from home, but the lintwhite unholiness was that the wildness sokoro was buried me surpassingly was a permanently in the pintado flyer skillet. Rational Review
- Leo and his friends also took the spinthariscope to an out-of-town astronomers convention and advertised that they had developed an optical system that could penetrate clouds.
- I'm a bleeder, someone just has to speak to me sharply and I'm gushing pints, so no blood means hopefully no big deal.
- Pinto Coelho was particularly fond of the Baroque style, and it features dominantly in his collection. Pinto Coelho's Daring Style
- In Aberdeen, the licensing board has proposed minimum drink prices in pubs of £1.75 for a pint of beer, cider, premium lager or cocktail.