How To Use Undrinkable In A Sentence

  • Until then, Australian wine will have a bitterness that makes it undrinkable.
  • I remembered it wasn't that good but actually I was wrong - it's almost undrinkable.
  • the water's muddiness made it undrinkable
  • Some can produce individual wines of the highest quality, and they rarely produce undrinkable swill.
  • ‘If water remains undrinkable, diseases will continue and mortality rates will rise,’ said the Iraqi trade minister.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The result won't be undrinkable, but it won't be very memorable.
  • On a recent visit to a motorway service station, we paid 15 quid for three rotten sandwiches and undrinkable tea.
  • Then you ride in phlegmy contact with every disease ridden proletarian in the city, drinking undrinkable coffee purchased from some dump or some over-priced Starbucks or wannabe. Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » Making Fiscal Sense
  • Over cropping and the accentuation of aromatics (despite the ripeness of the fruit) has led to many wines that I find completely devoid of any elegance and frankly, undrinkable. Jamesport Vineyards 2007 Sauvignon Blanc Reserve
  • It is a disturbing piece, composed for a city where pollution levels generated by Soviet industry remained notorious long after the fall of Communism, producing air that was unbreathable and water that was undrinkable.
  • He did buy one small mug of tea for 98 pence which was undrinkable.
  • Home winemaking still suffers something of an image problem, with those jokes about Aunt Enid's undrinkable nettle wine.
  • The red wine came from casks stored in some mildewy dungeon and came in two flavors: extra-dry, which was completely undrinkable, and dry, which was merely bad.
  • Breakfast was hot chocolate -- sandy, sour, nearly undrinkable, but religiously provided at least once a week in place of coffee. STONE CITY
  • `I couldn't make the coffee beforehand, or it would be undrinkable. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • Pour half a cup of whatever undrinkable swill you've got left plus half a cup of water into a zip-lock bag.
  • Until the end of the 17th century most wines were spoiled and undrinkable within six months of the vintage.
  • It is an additive used to make the ethanol produced undrinkable by people.
  • The water in the center of the atoll is undrinkable and holds only pond weed and biting isopods (a type of small crustacean).
  • An old hand will tell you the peculiarities of every spike in England, as: at A you are allowed to smoke but there are bugs in the cells; at B the beds are comfortable but the porter is a bully; at C they let you out early in the morning but the tea is undrinkable; at D the officials steal your money if you have anyand so on interminably. Down and Out in Paris and London
  • The wine list was extensive and not cheap, but if I have one whinge it is that the wine-by-the-glass was undrinkable.
  • In the Eighties, when wine drinkers were young and innocent, Britain's wine retailers and brewers were able to palm off a high percentage of this undrinkable rubbish.
  • There was not one undrinkable or corked bottle in the 60 I tasted.
  • In the most extreme cases it renders a wine undrinkable (though not physically dangerous); in others it just flattens its aromas and flavours.
  • Breakfast was hot chocolate -- sandy, sour, nearly undrinkable, but religiously provided at least once a week in place of coffee. STONE CITY
  • In Hindu mythology, the two demons Rahu and Ketu are said to "swallow" the sun during eclipses, snuffing out its life-giving light and causing food to become inedible and water undrinkable .
  • We drink it through a bombilla, the little metal suckable strainer they also use in Argentina to drink maté, an exuberantly undrinkable local tea brewed from some violent green shrub.
  • The difference between what is tasteless and what is not seems to rest ultimately on that between what is drinkable and what is undrinkable both are tasteable, but the latter is bad and tends to destroy taste, while the former is the normal stimulus of taste. On the Soul
  • There was not one undrinkable or corked bottle in the 60 I tasted.
  • A clock ticked, the undrinkable coffee went cold in the plastic beaker.
  • Wells went dry and the water that could be got at was undrinkable - scientifically proven by the district medical officer.
  • I'd ordered a glass of semi-sweet house wine that was undrinkable.
  • In addition, 90 percent of cities have polluted groundwater and in Beijing, the water coming from taps is undrinkable. China’s Overpopulation Blowback
  • European visitors to the site on the Wells Estate are often dismayed to find a landmark where undrinkable water leaks from crumbling walls.
  • Wines made in unlined new chestnut barrels can be so tannic as to be undrinkable.
  • Apparently the whole city's water supply is currently undrinkable, and they are having to use bottled water for everything.
  • He inherited a vineyard east of Naples from a friend who was murdered in Paris, but the wine was undrinkable.
  • When a vampire bites a werewolf, the vampire and wolf will die, because lupine blood is undrinkable, and the werewolf has a nasty reaction to the vampire's fangs.
  • Australian wine under £5 is all but undrinkable.
  • It just makes that particular beer I cherished seem tepid, stagnant and undrinkable.
  • The same winery's Swan Bay Pinot Noir (closed with a screwcap) was undrinkable.
  • However, the view from my desk is virtually non-existent, my email inbox didn't transfer properly, the tea in the drinks machine is completely undrinkable and the journey home was hellish.
  • Sadly, however, the table service is sloppy and the Guinness is undrinkable.
  • The odd pub sells mulled wine on tap, but generally it's expensive and of such poor quality that it's pretty well undrinkable.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy