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32 Sentences With "inebriating"

How to use inebriating in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "inebriating" and check conjugation/comparative form for "inebriating". Mastering all the usages of "inebriating" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Plus, of course, they have that inebriating effect that takes us to a different plane.
"Wine, and all inebriating liquors are forbidden as being the cause of more evil than profit," he wrote.
As we age, the search changes: the inebriating mysteries matter less, and the small sustaining explanations matter more.
Both are known for their analgesic and anti-inflammatory powers — THC, of course, is responsible for weed's inebriating effects.
It is recorded as part of the permeating and inebriating atmosphere of the haphazard which is the essence of Mr. Powell's art.
These days, cannabidiol, or CBD, which is the non-inebriating compound in marijuana, is being used for pain, anxiety, and as a sleep aid.
CBD, or cannabidiol, is an ingredient in marijuana that is being studied for various health benefits, but one of its perks is that it's not inebriating.
The Legends of Tomorrow pilot included both a bar fight and a bong fight, so they've always been pretty laid-back when it comes to inebriating substances.
The problem is that at large doses, THC can be extremely inebriating and it's also a controlled substance—making it tough for researchers to do large-scale clinical trials.
Yet I still feel an abject sense of powerlessness, a feeling that, in the past, led me to seek some semblance of control via the excessive ingestion of inebriating liquid.
Sure, a few people who use this non-inebriating weed compound for recreation or for its potential medical benefits may experience mild tiredness, appetite changes, or an occasional case of diarrhea.
After embedding with some local fishermen, Hamilton sits down for a curried seafood feast and samples a few fish brains in the hopes of feeling the inebriating effects of the species.
You may have observed, especially if you live in a fairly progressive city, that the wellness industry has a raging boner for CBD, one of the core non-inebriating compounds in cannabis.
Instead, she found innocuous things inebriating and waxed poetic about it — she loved how her boyfriend walked with his hands in his pockets, and she found the simplest things like "slam of screen doors" titillating.
Our family favorite was the "Big Barrel," which we imagined inebriating many a medieval castle dweller in its day, discovered Goldilocks-fashion only after following signs that led first to a deceptively large "small" barrel, then to a medium one (immense).
The honey thus collected by the Gurung owes its inebriating properties to the nectar which the giant bees gather from a deep red-flowered species of Rhododendron, which, in turn, owes its toxicity to the compound grayanotoxin, widespread in the plant family Ericaceae, to which the genus Rhododendron belongs.
Ritual enemas and other psychoactive substances were also taken by those who drank balché. According to food writer Sandor Katz, the ancient Maya consumed balché in enema form to maximize its inebriating effect. After the Maya were conquered by the Spanish, the drink was banned and their orchards were destroyed.
The seeds and leaves of Salvia viridis have been added to fermenting vats to "greatly increase the inebriating quality of the liquor." A Modern Herbal, M. Grieve and C. F. Lyel. An infusion of the leaves was used for sore gums, and powdered leaves for snuff. It was also reported to be a good honey-producing plant.
Barthes's many monthly contributions, collected in his Mythologies (1957), frequently interrogated specific cultural materials in order to expose how bourgeois society asserted its values through them. For example, Barthes cited the portrayal of wine in French society. Its description as a robust and healthy habit is a bourgeois ideal that is contradicted by certain realities (i.e., that wine can be unhealthy and inebriating).
He also sees Bull Bullets inebriating the Indians. At night, Luke takes advantage of the Indians' sleep to free the scientists and to imprison the son of the chief. The latter, with his men, immediately sets out to find them and manages to make them prisoners. However, the son persuades his father not to hurt them because they showed him the dangers of fire-water.
An Essay on the Inventions and Customs of Both Ancients and Moderns in the Use of Inebriating Liquors, p. 136. Titsingh's published compilation of a preliminary Japanese lexiconTitsingh, Isaac. (1781). "Eenige Japansche Woorden" ("Some Japanese Words"), Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap (Transactions of the Batabian Academy), Vol. III. was only the early evidence of a project which continued for the rest of his life.
Examples of zero-alcohol beer in Iran. As per sharia, purchasing and consuming alcoholic drinks is banned and prohibited in the country. Low-alcohol beer is beer with little or no alcohol content and aims to reproduce the taste of beer without (or at least reduce) the inebriating effects of standard alcoholic brews. Most low-alcohol beers are lagers, but there are some low-alcohol ales.
The word xtabentún means "vines growing on stone" in the Mayan language. It refers to the Christmas vine (Turbina corymbosa), a species of morning glory whose seeds contain ergine and have hallucinogenic properties. This has led Jonathan Ott to suggest that balché may also have had entheogenic qualities, although this remains to be demonstrated. Ancient Mayas likely would have enjoyed the inebriating effects of a similar beverage to produce visionary and trance states.
Lagochilus inebrians, commonly known as inebriating mint, intoxicating mint, or Turkistan mint, is a member of the mint family, Lamiaceae. The name Lagochilus inebrians is derived from the Greek words lagos and cheilos, literally meaning "hare" and "lip/cheek" and inebrians meaning intoxicating, thus translating to intoxicating hare's lip. The name reflects the morphology of the upper lip of the flower's corolla. Lagochilus inebrians is widely distributed in the Samarkand and Bukhara provinces of Uzbekistan.
The review in The Hindu says: "Selvaraghavan knows where his potential lies and has tapped it suitably." Pavithra Srinivasan of Rediff gave the film 3 out of 5 and wrote: "[It] has a brilliant first half but the film looses the steam in the second half". Sify claimed: "Simplistic story with a hard hitting impact, Mayakkam Enna will stay with you". Behindwoods rated 3.5/5 and called it "emotionally rich" and an "inebriating experience by itself".
When Canzi had triumphed in the title role of Mercadante's Didone abbandonata at Vicenza, a poem in her honour was published in Teatri, arti e letturatura. The anonymous poet described her voice as inebriating him with its "pure voluptuousness" and proclaimed that had Dido sung like Canzi, Aeneas would never have abandoned her. Izzo, Francesco (2012). "Divas and Sonnets" in Rachel Cowgill and Hilary Poriss (eds.) The Arts of the Prima Donna in the Long Nineteenth Century, pp. 5-6.
The duo has cited Frank Sinatra and Feist's "So Sorry" (2007) as primary influences during the creation process. They were also inspired by tracks such as LCD Soundsystem's "New York I Love You, But You’re Bringing Me Down" (2007), Post Malone's "Stay" (2018), Johnny Mathis's "Misty" (1959), Daniel Caesar's "Japanese Denim" (2016) and Melody Gardot's "Who Will Comfort Me" (2009). Mastering and mixing were handled by John Greenham and Rob Kinelski, respectively. Inspiration for "Xanny" came to Eilish after seeing friends heavily inebriating themselves at a party, consequently becoming "completely not who they were".
Ram and Leela develop a romance and plan to elope, but a grim turn of events follows when Kanji accidentally kills Meghji, Ram's brother, and is, in turn, killed by Ram. To escape the suffering, Ram and Leela elope and marry, but just as they are about to consummate their marriage, Ram's friends trace them and betray him by inebriating him and informing Leela's family of their location. The next morning, Leela is forcibly taken back home by Bhavani, her cousin, while Ram is hailed as a hero by the Rajadis for soiling Leela's reputation. He is rewarded by being made the new chieftain of the Rajadis.
Though written sources regarding alcoholic drinks before the early 7th century are scarce, literature concerning the early Muslims reveals a great deal of information about alcohol at the time of Prophet Muhammad. The Hadith collected by al-Bukhari, records a number of fermented drinks available in the Arabian Peninsula at that time. According to ‘Umar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb, “Intoxicants (khamr) are prepared from five things: raisins, dates, wheat, barley, or honey,” while Anas ibn Malik mentions wines made from at least four different kinds of dates. In addition to declaring wine to be haram, Muhammad himself considered other cooked or fermented drinks such as tilā’ and naqir as inebriating and thus forbade the pressing of grapes and the drinking of pressed grape juice.
Cioculescu acknowledged Eliade's "impressive erudition" and status as "column leader" of a generation concerned with Romanian Orthodox spirituality and mysticism, but contended that Eliade's manner was "occasionally plethoric, poetically inebriating itself through abuse". Ion Hadârcă, "Mircea Eliade la începuturi" , in Revista Sud-Est, Nr. 1/2007 While the two figures continued to criticize each other in writing over theoretical aspects, Cioculescu admired Eliade the novelist. In 1932, the former was among the jury members granting the Editura Cultura Națională annual prize for literature, and was instrumental in assigning the distinction to Eliade's Bengal Nights novel.Eliade (1990), p.238, 249 In late autumn, he attended a session of Eliade's group Criterion, which was at the time a platform organizing public debates around intellectuals of various hues, and was admitting speakers from the far left, the far right, and various moderate fields in between.
Viktor Aloisius Reko, (born August 3, 1880 in Vienna) was an Austrian teacher and scientific author who moved to Mexico in 1921. He is best known for his popular book Magische Gifte: Rausch- und Betäubungsmittel der Neuen Welt ("Magic Poisons: Inebriating and Narcotic Substances of the New World"), first published in 1936. This book recorded a number of second-hand observations on New World psychoactive drugs, paraphrased from notes he took of conversations with his cousin, the eminent Mexican ethnobotanist Dr. Blas Pablo Reko, including the first published refutation of Dr. William Edwin Safford's uncharacteristically untenable assertion that teonanácatl was not a mushroom, but a cactus. Reko's book also covered the following drugs, many of which were not mentioned in the earlier book Phantastica by Louis Lewin: sinicuichi (Heimia spp.) for which he falsely claimed psychoactivity, Ololiúqui (Turbina corymbosa), peyotl (Lophophora williamsii), marihuana (Cannabis sativa), toloachi (Datura stramonium var.
Dogs, which in Peru are subject > to the venereal disease, are not so in the northern regions; hogs, which > dwindle in Pennsylvania, in other places lose their shape, but not their > stature; in the English colonies, European sheep become smaller, without > losing their wool; in the islands, as in Jamaica, they change their wool for > a hair hard and coarse, which cannot be manufactured... Pauw's work also dealt with the manners and customs unique to the natives of the Americas, ranging from the Inuit and Canadian Indians in the north to the Peruvians in the south. De Pauw speculates on differences and similarities between the North Americans and natives in Siberia. He notes: > The Tunguses, a people of Siberia, are, like the Canadians, grave, > phlegmatic, and speak little; because they have but few ideas, and still > fewer words to express them; add to this, that the silence and gloom of > their forests naturally induce an habitual melancholy. Hence it is that they > prefer strong and inebriating liquors, which quicken the motion of the > blood, and set the machine in action, to the most precious gifts that can be > made them.

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