释义 |
booze verb to drink alcohol, especially immoderately UK, 1325- [A]ll members of the Griggs family served shop while old Griggs boozed his days away at the Bull and Mouth next door[.] — Norman Lindsay, Halfway to Anywhere, p. 38, 1947
- The dregs of society hang out here, and hustlers of both sexes intermingle with short-con men, narcotics pushers, junkies, and plain bottle babies who booze their way through life. — Johnny Shearer, The Male Hustler, p. 55, 1966
- [T]hey were boozing their army pay away and were pretty noisy and a couple had been scrapping. — Patsy Adam-Smith, Folklore of the Australian Railwaymen, p. 55, 1969
- “You come here, yes, to booze and go mad.” — Barry Oakley, A Salute to the Great McCarthy, p. 103, 1970
- We’ll be able ta bet an’ booze all day long. — Sick Puppy, p. 10, 1998
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