carouse
verb /kəˈraʊz/
/kəˈraʊz/
[intransitive] (literary)Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they carouse | /kəˈraʊz/ /kəˈraʊz/ |
he / she / it carouses | /kəˈraʊzɪz/ /kəˈraʊzɪz/ |
past simple caroused | /kəˈraʊzd/ /kəˈraʊzd/ |
past participle caroused | /kəˈraʊzd/ /kəˈraʊzd/ |
-ing form carousing | /kəˈraʊzɪŋ/ /kəˈraʊzɪŋ/ |
- to spend time drinking alcohol, laughing and enjoying yourself in a noisy way with other people
- His paintings depict lively scenes of peasants carousing in crowded taverns.
Word Originmid 16th cent.: originally as an adverb meaning ‘right out, completely’ in the phrase drink carouse, from German gar aus trinken; hence ‘drink heavily, have a drinking bout’.