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单词 drunk
释义

Definition of drunk in English:

drunk

verbdrʌŋkdrəŋk
  • past participle of drink
adjective drʌŋkdrəŋk
  • 1predicative Affected by alcohol to the extent of losing control of one's faculties or behaviour.

    he was so drunk he lurched from wall to wall
    she was drunk on vodka
    Example sentencesExamples
    • So my experiment to stay continuously drunk nine days straight has hit a slight snag.
    • There were reports of car surfing, vandalism and a high number of drunk teenagers.
    • A couple of people walked out when I was in Edinburgh but one of them was a very drunk man and I asked him to leave.
    • These are not the kind of responsibilities a drunk cares to shoulder.
    • It's hard to imagine how a drunk bully of a father is likely to remember a law that bans smacking.
    • If I had a penny for every cute barman in the world, I'd be a very drunk man.
    • As the train pulled into Shepherds Bush, one of their drunk mates was waiting on the platform and was greeted like a hero.
    • During the past few years, pilots have had to deal with drunk passengers who have kicked holes in the doors.
    • It's one thing playing to a bunch of drunk students on a Saturday night.
    • We had a drunk chat about it last week and I've thought about it before.
    • The youngsters then fled the scene when the police arrived, only to be picked up later drunk and abusive.
    • He had come in a drunken rage only to find her already drunk mother at home.
    • He then asked them if they thought that a drunk man would have had the presence of mind to jump into the back.
    • What better opportunity are you going to get to show off your moves on stage for a room full of drunk strangers?
    • Maybe the Professor was even more drunk than he remembers, which is usually the case.
    • While drunk last weekend, I discovered that I could fit the crowbar through the hole in my earlobe.
    • Will drunk college students attempt to scale the seven metre structure?
    • She got really drunk tonight and didn't want to go home to her parents so she showed up here.
    • Sometimes, in this industry, crazy drunk people call you at work for no apparent reason.
    • Perhaps this is an approach to discouraging driving while drunk and thirsty.
    Synonyms
    intoxicated, inebriated, drunken, befuddled, incapable, tipsy, the worse for drink, under the influence, maudlin
    blind drunk, dead drunk, rolling drunk, roaring drunk, (as) drunk as a lord, (as) drunk as a skunk
    sottish, tippling, toping, gin-soaked
    informal tight, merry, the worse for wear, woozy, pie-eyed, two/three sheets to the wind, under the table, plastered, smashed, wrecked, sloshed, soused, well oiled, sozzled, blotto, blitzed, canned, stewed, pickled, tanked (up), soaked, bombed, hammered, blasted, off one's face, out of/off one's head, out of one's skull, wasted, wired, in one's cups, reeling, cock-eyed, zonked, guttered, fuddled, stinko, ratted
    British informal legless, steaming, bevvied, paralytic, Brahms and Liszt, half cut, out of it, having had a skinful, bladdered, trolleyed, well away, squiffy, tiddly, out of one's box, having had one over the eight, cut, steamed, mullered, slaughtered, lashed
    British vulgar slang pissed, as pissed as a newt/fart, rat-arsed, arseholed
    Scottish informal fou
    North American informal loaded, trashed, crock, juiced, sauced, squiffed, swacked, strung out, liquored up, out of one's gourd, in the bag, zoned, blitzed, ripped
    Scottish &amp Australian informal full
    North American &amp Australian/New Zealand informal shickered, shot
    Australian/New Zealand informal grogged up, as full as a goog, inked
    New Zealand informal munted
    South African informal lekker
    euphemistic tired and emotional
    informal, dated stoned, lit up, as tight as a tick
    British informal, dated half seas over, pixilated
    British informal, offensive monged, monged out
    archaic sotted, besotted, foxed, screwed
    rare crapulent, crapulous, inebriate, bibulous, ebrious, ebriose, ebriate
    1. 1.1drunk with Overcome with (a strong emotion)
      the crowd was high on euphoria and drunk with patriotism
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Floral tributes perfume the cool morning air and the atmosphere is drunk with sweetness.
      • They act like radicals drunk with power, doing what ever it takes to destroy any opposing political force that dares to challenge it.
      • He has become drunk with power as the leader of the tribe.
      • He was filled with euphoria for this moment, drunk with passion.
      • Yet I was so drunk with what I was doing, and her dark hair, tanned skin and chocolate eyes were all that was needed in order for me to set loose on her.
      • And so, for the next few days or so, we're loopy with love, drunk with it.
      • Finally, still drunk with sleep, Adrian realized it was the phone.
      • His bloodshot eyes were glassy, now drunk with outrage.
      • The Mets grabbed as headlines this winter with their splashy signings, leaving New York fans drunk with hope.
      • He came to Paris and found his true destiny as a symbolist poet, perpetually drunk with the power, the colour and the music of words.
noun drʌŋkdrəŋk
  • 1A person who is drunk or who habitually drinks to excess.

    we staggered up the path like a couple of drunks
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Although the drunks sit and drink directly in front of the CCTV camera little or no action appears to be taken against them.
    • The drunks were still on the streets, but not in great numbers.
    • I really wasn't that stoked about getting into a touchy political discourse with a bunch of drunks I didn't know.
    • The two tend to lean on each other, like a couple of drunks propping each other up.
    • The headache usually begins half an hour after drinking, and drunks can have very serious headaches.
    • Though he admired drunks immoderately, he was seldom seen drunk in what was already a heavy - drinking milieu.
    • The crowd is even bigger than when he went in because of a couple of drunks who have taken up residence on a bench nearby.
    • He said he saw a drunk walking down the street who ‘just floated up and disappeared’.
    • We can drink a little, drink a lot or become staggering drunks that have stopped studying altogether.
    • I never went in, but sat a way up the road on a bench near the tiny Council garden, the one normally claimed by the weekend drunks, but I was too shattered to care.
    • It probably would have been better if I had been drunk; they say drunks fall off all sorts of things and are fine, because they're floppy.
    • It should be relatively easy to pick off the strays, the drunks and the aesthetically challenged from the edge of the dance floor.
    • It follows, then, that Mark's idea of restricting access to alcohol for mean drunks is also a good idea.
    • An unprecedented blitz by police on drunks and licensees who sell alcohol to under-age drinkers starts today.
    • Eight objectors have written to the council saying a new licence would mean loud music, late night drunks, loss of parking and damage to their cars.
    • In the 10 years that I have been a drinker, I've known a lot of drunks.
    • Police had stopped drunks from hanging about but, over the last couple of months, they have drifted back.
    • How many people in public places are scared of drunks?
    Synonyms
    drunkard, inebriate, drinker, imbiber, tippler, sot
    heavy drinker, hard drinker, serious drinker, problem drinker
    alcoholic, dipsomaniac, chronic alcoholic, alcohol abuser, alcohol addict, person with a drink problem
    informal boozer, soak, lush, wino, alky, sponge, elbow-bender, barfly, tosspot
    US informal juicehead
    Australian/New Zealand informal hophead, metho
    archaic toper
    vulgar slang pisshead, piss artist
    1. 1.1informal A drinking bout; a period of drunkenness.
      he used to go on these blind drunks
      Synonyms
      drinking bout, debauch

Phrases

  • drunk and disorderly

    • Creating a public disturbance under the influence of alcohol.

      arrested for being drunk and disorderly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Following scuffles, eight teenagers were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, four for public order offences and three for causing a breach of the peace.
      • If police see drunks being verbally abusive to members of the public they will be arrested for drunk and disorderly behaviour or public order offences.
      • The 32-year-old mum hit a female officer after she was arrested for being drunk and disorderly at the Hylands Park concert.
      • Six men were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, for fighting or for breach of the peace.
      • It was only an offence to be drunk and disorderly in a public place.
      • He says from now on they will not have to pay fines on their overdue library books, they cannot be arrested for being drunk and disorderly and they get free parking.
      • A judge convicted of being drunk and disorderly in a kebab shop has had his Yorkshire law offices closed amid allegations of financial irregularities.
      • However, officers at the scene said that, although a number of the fans were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, the day went better than expected.
      • The 24-year-old was arrested for being drunk and disorderly and was due to be questioned today.
      • An alcoholic was fined £5 by magistrates after pleading guilty to being drunk and disorderly.
  • (as) drunk as a lord (or skunk)

    • Extremely drunk.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Freezing cold and drunk as a skunk, I am doing the sensible thing and ploughing forward through the snowy city streets toward home, as if I have a purpose.
      • I rode in, off the trail, drunk as a skunk, barely able to stay on my horse.
      • Beside, nursing Kat through another night of getting drunk as a skunk is not really my idea of fun.
      • He's usually drunk as a skunk, or else raising a big stink about something else.
      • Then later, drunk as a skunk, he asked for a cigarette again.
      • Even when he was as drunk as a skunk, he was undeniably attractive.
      • You know I'm meant to be the fastest hacker in the whole gang and yet here I am drunk as a skunk.
      • So I'm feeling guilty because I'm calling an ambulance for someone who's obviously drunk as a skunk.
      • He was drunk as a skunk, barely standing and being abusive.
      • You can eat and drink like a king for £25 - £30 or banquet and get drunk as a lord for £50.
      Synonyms
      intoxicated, inebriated, drunken, befuddled, incapable, tipsy, the worse for drink, under the influence, maudlin

Rhymes

bunk, chunk, clunk, dunk, flunk, funk, gunk, hunk, Monck, monk, plunk, shrunk, skunk, slunk, stunk, sunk, thunk, trunk
 
 

Definition of drunk in US English:

drunk

verbdrəŋkdrəNGk
  • past participle of drink
adjectivedrəŋkdrəNGk
  • 1Affected by alcohol to the extent of losing control of one's faculties or behavior.

    he was so drunk he lurched from wall to wall
    she was drunk on vodka
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Sometimes, in this industry, crazy drunk people call you at work for no apparent reason.
    • It's one thing playing to a bunch of drunk students on a Saturday night.
    • These are not the kind of responsibilities a drunk cares to shoulder.
    • There were reports of car surfing, vandalism and a high number of drunk teenagers.
    • During the past few years, pilots have had to deal with drunk passengers who have kicked holes in the doors.
    • He then asked them if they thought that a drunk man would have had the presence of mind to jump into the back.
    • It's hard to imagine how a drunk bully of a father is likely to remember a law that bans smacking.
    • We had a drunk chat about it last week and I've thought about it before.
    • He had come in a drunken rage only to find her already drunk mother at home.
    • If I had a penny for every cute barman in the world, I'd be a very drunk man.
    • She got really drunk tonight and didn't want to go home to her parents so she showed up here.
    • Perhaps this is an approach to discouraging driving while drunk and thirsty.
    • Will drunk college students attempt to scale the seven metre structure?
    • As the train pulled into Shepherds Bush, one of their drunk mates was waiting on the platform and was greeted like a hero.
    • While drunk last weekend, I discovered that I could fit the crowbar through the hole in my earlobe.
    • What better opportunity are you going to get to show off your moves on stage for a room full of drunk strangers?
    • So my experiment to stay continuously drunk nine days straight has hit a slight snag.
    • A couple of people walked out when I was in Edinburgh but one of them was a very drunk man and I asked him to leave.
    • The youngsters then fled the scene when the police arrived, only to be picked up later drunk and abusive.
    • Maybe the Professor was even more drunk than he remembers, which is usually the case.
    Synonyms
    intoxicated, inebriated, drunken, befuddled, incapable, tipsy, the worse for drink, under the influence, maudlin
    1. 1.1drunk withpredicative Overcome with (a strong emotion)
      the crowd was high on euphoria and drunk with patriotism
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Floral tributes perfume the cool morning air and the atmosphere is drunk with sweetness.
      • The Mets grabbed as headlines this winter with their splashy signings, leaving New York fans drunk with hope.
      • Yet I was so drunk with what I was doing, and her dark hair, tanned skin and chocolate eyes were all that was needed in order for me to set loose on her.
      • He was filled with euphoria for this moment, drunk with passion.
      • Finally, still drunk with sleep, Adrian realized it was the phone.
      • He has become drunk with power as the leader of the tribe.
      • His bloodshot eyes were glassy, now drunk with outrage.
      • They act like radicals drunk with power, doing what ever it takes to destroy any opposing political force that dares to challenge it.
      • He came to Paris and found his true destiny as a symbolist poet, perpetually drunk with the power, the colour and the music of words.
      • And so, for the next few days or so, we're loopy with love, drunk with it.
noundrəŋkdrəNGk
  • 1A person who is drunk or who habitually drinks to excess.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Though he admired drunks immoderately, he was seldom seen drunk in what was already a heavy - drinking milieu.
    • An unprecedented blitz by police on drunks and licensees who sell alcohol to under-age drinkers starts today.
    • I really wasn't that stoked about getting into a touchy political discourse with a bunch of drunks I didn't know.
    • The crowd is even bigger than when he went in because of a couple of drunks who have taken up residence on a bench nearby.
    • He said he saw a drunk walking down the street who ‘just floated up and disappeared’.
    • Police had stopped drunks from hanging about but, over the last couple of months, they have drifted back.
    • Eight objectors have written to the council saying a new licence would mean loud music, late night drunks, loss of parking and damage to their cars.
    • The headache usually begins half an hour after drinking, and drunks can have very serious headaches.
    • The drunks were still on the streets, but not in great numbers.
    • It should be relatively easy to pick off the strays, the drunks and the aesthetically challenged from the edge of the dance floor.
    • In the 10 years that I have been a drinker, I've known a lot of drunks.
    • How many people in public places are scared of drunks?
    • Although the drunks sit and drink directly in front of the CCTV camera little or no action appears to be taken against them.
    • It follows, then, that Mark's idea of restricting access to alcohol for mean drunks is also a good idea.
    • We can drink a little, drink a lot or become staggering drunks that have stopped studying altogether.
    • It probably would have been better if I had been drunk; they say drunks fall off all sorts of things and are fine, because they're floppy.
    • The two tend to lean on each other, like a couple of drunks propping each other up.
    • I never went in, but sat a way up the road on a bench near the tiny Council garden, the one normally claimed by the weekend drunks, but I was too shattered to care.
    Synonyms
    drunkard, inebriate, drinker, imbiber, tippler, sot
    1. 1.1informal A drinking bout or period of drunkenness.
      he used to go on these blind drunks

Phrases

  • drunk and disorderly

    • Creating a public disturbance under the influence of alcohol.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Six men were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, for fighting or for breach of the peace.
      • If police see drunks being verbally abusive to members of the public they will be arrested for drunk and disorderly behaviour or public order offences.
      • An alcoholic was fined £5 by magistrates after pleading guilty to being drunk and disorderly.
      • He says from now on they will not have to pay fines on their overdue library books, they cannot be arrested for being drunk and disorderly and they get free parking.
      • Following scuffles, eight teenagers were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, four for public order offences and three for causing a breach of the peace.
      • The 32-year-old mum hit a female officer after she was arrested for being drunk and disorderly at the Hylands Park concert.
      • However, officers at the scene said that, although a number of the fans were arrested for being drunk and disorderly, the day went better than expected.
      • It was only an offence to be drunk and disorderly in a public place.
      • The 24-year-old was arrested for being drunk and disorderly and was due to be questioned today.
      • A judge convicted of being drunk and disorderly in a kebab shop has had his Yorkshire law offices closed amid allegations of financial irregularities.
  • (as) drunk as a skunk

    • Extremely drunk.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He's usually drunk as a skunk, or else raising a big stink about something else.
      • Then later, drunk as a skunk, he asked for a cigarette again.
      • You can eat and drink like a king for £25 - £30 or banquet and get drunk as a lord for £50.
      • Even when he was as drunk as a skunk, he was undeniably attractive.
      • He was drunk as a skunk, barely standing and being abusive.
      • So I'm feeling guilty because I'm calling an ambulance for someone who's obviously drunk as a skunk.
      • Freezing cold and drunk as a skunk, I am doing the sensible thing and ploughing forward through the snowy city streets toward home, as if I have a purpose.
      • You know I'm meant to be the fastest hacker in the whole gang and yet here I am drunk as a skunk.
      • Beside, nursing Kat through another night of getting drunk as a skunk is not really my idea of fun.
      • I rode in, off the trail, drunk as a skunk, barely able to stay on my horse.
      Synonyms
      intoxicated, inebriated, drunken, befuddled, incapable, tipsy, the worse for drink, under the influence, maudlin
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/25 13:37:57