different between boozy vs drunk

boozy

English

Etymology

From booze +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?bu?zi/
  • Rhymes: -u?zi

Adjective

boozy (comparative boozier, superlative booziest)

  1. (of a person) Intoxicated by alcohol.
  2. (of a person) Inclined to consume a significant amount of alcohol.
  3. (of an event) Involving a large consumption of alcohol.
    We all had hangovers after a boozy weekend in town.
  4. (of food) Containing or cooked with alcohol.
    For dessert, the hosts treated us to a helping of boozy apple pie.

Synonyms

  • (intoxicated by alcohol): See Thesaurus:drunk
  • (inclined to consume alcohol): drunk, sottish
  • (involving large consumption of alcohol):
  • (containing alcohol): See Thesaurus:alcoholic

Translations

boozy From the web:

  • what boozy means
  • what boozy eggnog
  • what's boozy floozy
  • what is boozy bingo
  • what is boozy brunch
  • what is boozy ice cream
  • what is boozy seltzer
  • what does boozy smell like


drunk

English

Etymology

From Middle English drunke, drunken, ydrunke, ydrunken, from Old English druncen, ?edruncen (drunk), from Proto-Germanic *drunkanaz, *gadrunkanaz (drunk; drunken), past participle of Proto-Germanic *drinkan? (to drink). Cognate with Saterland Frisian dronken, West Frisian dronken, Dutch dronken, gedronken, German Low German drunken, bedrunken, German getrunken, betrunken, Swedish drucken, Icelandic drukkinn.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: dr?ngk, IPA(key): /d???k/, /d?????k/
  • Rhymes: -??k

Adjective

drunk (comparative drunker, superlative drunkest)

  1. Intoxicated as a result of excessive alcohol consumption, usually by drinking alcoholic beverages.
    • 1885, Richard F. Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Night 557:
      So I took a great dry gourd and, cutting open the head, scooped out the inside and cleaned it; after which I gathered grapes from a vine which grew hard by and squeezed them into the gourd, till it was full of the juice. Then I stopped up the mouth and set in the sun, where I left it for some days, until it became strong wine; and every day I used to drink of it, to comfort and sustain me under my fatigues with that from froward and obstinate fiend; and as often as I drank myself drunk, I forgot my troubles and took new heart.
  2. Habitually or frequently in a state of intoxication.
  3. (usually followed by with or on) Elated or emboldened.
    Drunk with power he immediately ordered a management reshuffle.
  4. Drenched or saturated with moisture or liquid.

Synonyms

  • (intoxicated from alcohol): See Thesaurus:drunk
  • (habitually of frequently intoxicated from alcohol): boozy, sottish
  • (saturated with moisture): See Thesaurus:wet
  • (slightly intoxicated):

tipsy, buzzed

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

drunk (plural drunks)

  1. One who is intoxicated with alcohol.
  2. A habitual drinker, especially one who is frequently intoxicated.
    Synonyms: alcoholic, drunkard, pisshead, piss artist, sot; see also Thesaurus:drunkard
  3. A drinking-bout; a period of drunkenness.
    • 1858, "A Scarcity of Jurors—Cangemi's Third Trial," New York Times, 8 Jun., p. 4:
      Gen. G. had been on a long drunk from July last until Christmas.
  4. A drunken state.
    • 2006, Patrick McCabe, Winterwood, Bloomsbury 2007, p. 10:
      Here – help yourself to another drop there, Redmond! By the time we've got a good drunk on us there'll be more crack in this valley than the night I pissed on the electric fence!

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

drunk

  1. past participle of drink
  2. (Southern US) simple past tense of drink

Anagrams

  • Knurd, knurd

drunk From the web:

  • what drunk girls are really like
  • what drunk feels like
  • what drunk are you
  • what drunk mean
  • what drunk goggles look like
  • what drunk animal are you
  • what drunk are you quiz
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