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"soused" Definitions
  1. [only before noun] (of fish) preserved in salt water and vinegar
  2. (old-fashioned, informal) drunk

74 Sentences With "soused"

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

And we'd let them take over because we'd be too soused to care.
We had dinner the night after his 90th birthday, and got soused on zombies.
By that point my thoroughly soused friends in center field were reduced to hoarse croakings.
Mr. Rosato's signature "SCTV" character was Marcello, a clumsy and frequently soused cooking-show host.
Drunk Gen Xers spend triple what soused millennials do, at $738.87 per drinker, versus $205.11.
That he's getting completely soused doesn't help matters much, even though everybody else is as well.
He is smooth under congressional fire from outraged Republicans and modest when soused with Democratic praise.
This year you will need to equip yourself with some trenchant commentary to fend off your soused interlocutor.
And even if it is about a bunch of soused comedians, that gives the show real educational value.
Boxes brimmed with soiled books and soggy clothes, Christmas decorations gone to ruin and soused childhood Power Rangers toys.
And among the most recognizable spinoffs is Peter, Dunbar's soused and mercurial sidekick, a feeble echo of Lear's Fool.
After all, an inebriated 50-something-year-old's soused comments are nearly identical to a Jack Pearson characterization mission statement.
One morning, Mike finds a badly beaten woman (Stefania Barr) near a field that he's slept in after another soused night.
Meanwhile, Morgan gets soused and, eyes rolling up into his head, begins chasing Margaret who has since changed into evening dress.
A traditional viande fumée sandwich served on mustard-soused slices of rye, however, makes for a decadent lunch on its own.
The next day, actual Midsummer, my father serves soused herring with sour cream, chives, dill and onion, plus my mom's new potatoes.
The acting is made of cardboard; but the legendary freak-out queen Veronica Cartwright is playing the movie's soused matriarch — she's cardboard origami.
The acting is made of cardboard; but the legendary freak-out queen Veronica Cartwright is playing the movie's soused matriarch — she's cardboard origami.
Attendees at alcohol-soused festivals and parades know to look for Linda Green, the self-styled "Ya-Ka-Mein Lady" for a bowlful.
After such trauma, it's no wonder that the intervening decades have been unkind to Danny, leaving him soused in alcohol and beached in gloom.
Instead he approached David Hudson of Three Day Hangover, a company that already presented classic plays in bars, about creating their own soused Shakespeare.
Given that everybody seemed to be having sex with everybody, not to mention being soused or stoned nightly, I decided to face the facts.
Her name is Carla F. Bad, and she never attended a 1980s Ivy League college party replete with soused guests and allegations of potentially criminal conduct.
If you were there in those heady days of the mid-to-late 00s, prepare to find yourself soused in big fat tears of the purest nostalgia.
Even Samuel Pepys did not expect to see his shirt, soused after a session at the Cock in Fleet Street, tethered with small wooden clips to a line.
She (for surely this piscine trophy is also female) is doused in rum and set on fire, suggesting that revenge is a dish best served hot and soused.
"Hidden Chamber" is a piece Cohen brought to the band fully written, but even so, the looming, soused-in-effects sound of the band becomes the main propulsive force.
City officials referenced the lines about a tattoo obtained by the song's soused narrator in an attempt to bar Virginia man Brad Beurhle from opening a tattoo shop in the city.
He will remain precariously pickled even after a fateful night of partying in 1972 with an equally soused pal (Jack Black) leaves him quadriplegic and entirely dependent on his lackadaisical caregiver.
In "Under the Table 2," a group of soused youths fix their single eyes on a giant stuffed olive and a sliced sausage whose luminous reds glow like the entrance to another world.
As one campaign staffer told New York magazine's Olivia Nuzzi as he disappeared into the freezing cold Iowa night, the only thing left was to get soused and give himself over to concupiscence.
Yes, there are padded seats, there are the tie-died septuagenarian "Weekend at Jerry's" cadavers with extinguished eyes, there are soused 63-year-old Hollywood producers cavorting in VIP tents, there is David Spade.
It was a mild March afternoon, and Mr. Buffett charmed the studio audience, even before he accepted a guitar and led them through "Margaritaville," which everyone knew, chorus and verse, like a soused catechism.
His 1982-83 portrait of Lemmy, leader of the English rock band Motörhead, shirtless and posed before a Confederate flag, is fuzzy, as if he was too soused to keep the scene in focus.
Over the course of the next 200 years of American history, there were a lot of different sorts of places to get soused (ignoring the near decade we collectively lost our minds on the issue).
After he slinks away, Midge downs a bottle of red wine on the subway, marches through the rain to the famed Gaslight club and winds up onstage, soaking and soused in a pink swing coat.
Sober, or moderately soused, he was an animate, wryly handsome fifty-two-year-old poet, essayist, and workshop leader, and the senior editor at, in Bobby's opinion, the country's sole remotely respectable poetry publishing house.
While the changes rob the central revelation of its impact, the film compensates with some serious star power: Paul Newman is the former football player who spends his days perpetually soused and refusing to sleep with his wife (Elizabeth Taylor, at her slinkiest).
And suddenly a drunk stumbles out from the audience and sloshily says, "I can do it, I can walk the tightrope," and he's clearly soused and is falling all over himself and practically killing himself walking up the ladder, and then he tries to walk across the tightrope.
By ripping up unused acceptance speeches, or getting quietly soused at the bar, or booking massages (as Kate Winslet did this year for the night of the Golden Globes, having mistakenly assumed she would not win) or enlisting, for the duration of the season, the comforting companionship of a childhood friend.
The obvious answer, of course, is Jaws, Steven Spielberg's 1975 blockbuster about a working-class cop (Roy Scheider), a rich nerd (Richard Dreyfuss), and a perma-soused lunatic (Robert Shaw) who board a dilapidated boat and head out to kill a large fish by … I dunno, poking it to death, maybe?
"I don't have an addictive personality whatsoever, so it was like wearing somebody else's skin," Ms. Blunt said of portraying the New York City suburbanite obsessed with a seemingly perfect couple she glimpses each day on her soused commute — just two doors down from where her ex-husband lives with his new wife and baby.
Many British comedic TV exports—the soused vulgarity of Absolutely Fabulous, Monty Python's whip-smart absurdism, the witty, cerebral bonhomie of The IT Crowd, and cringe-inducing character studies like The Office and Saxondale—have been cultishly cherished by non-UK audiences looking for alternatives to the homogenous humor that American TV comedies had, until the last decade or so, come to define.
The first involves drinking a can of Coca-Cola in the shower, the second sees you consuming three cigarettes and five cups of coffee in front of Gordon Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares, and third requires sitting entirely naked on the stiffest chair you can find and trying to read Malcolm Lowry's utterly soused 1947 novel Under the Volcano, until that book's potent stench of booze-clogged pores forces you into a deep and depressed slumber, effectively forcing you to sleep the hangover off.
Among the supporting players, the great Oliver Ford Davies is a particular treasure, appearing in "Richard II" as an aggrieved Duke of York, his loyalty to his king sorely tried and ultimately broken; as a hilariously debauched Justice Shallow in "Henry IV, Part II"; and as a beautifully spoken chorus in "Henry V." Joshua Richards deftly switches from a chronically soused Bardolph, one of Falstaff's boon companions, in both parts of "Henry IV" to a noble Fluellen in the second half (barely recognizable with without Bardolph's Rudolph-red nose).
But these soon give way to the kind of artifacts that could have been selected by only a clever, peculiar mind, and that could have emerged only out of Russia: a stack of pages from the Bible, which had been serially inserted into issues of the local Communist daily in the '90s to increase its flagging circulation; a newspaper photo of a soused Boris Yeltsin jiving with a band after barging onto the stage at a luncheon in Germany, propped against a drum with a gashed skin; next to it, another image, of Vladimir Putin playing a baby grand, perched above a grinning row of piano keys; a section of railway track with a dark-red stain, the very site (although not really, of course) of Anna Karenina's death.
Walker then came up with Soused, with the intended meaning of being submerged in water.
Unfortunately, the show veers into melodramata when a soused Penny expresses second thoughts to Raj about dumping Leonard.
In the Netherlands soused herring is most often served as a snack, most frequently plain, or with cut onions. Whole herring is often eaten by lifting the herring by its tail and eating it upwards holding it over the mouth. Soused herring dishes in Northern Germany are traditionally served with potatoes boiled in their skins, French beans, finely sliced fried bacon and onions. It is also common in Germany to eat soused herring with sliced raw onions in a bread roll, in a dish called Matjesbrötchen.
As skin removal requires experience, fillets or double fillets should be attempted first. The soused herrings are silvery outside and pink inside when fresh, and should not be bought if they appear grey and oily. Whereas salt herrings have a salt content of 20% and must be soaked in water before consumption, soused herrings do not need soaking.
To protect against infection by nematodes of the genus Anisakis, European Union regulations state that fish should be frozen at −20 °C for at least 24 hours. In the modern day, soused herrings can therefore be produced throughout the year.
The word 'soused' can also describe a marinated herring that has been cooked. The herring is usually baked in the (vinegar) marinade (but can be fried and then soaked in the marinade). It is served cold. This is usual in Scotland, Wales and Ireland.
A common preparation is made with bismarck herring or soused herring. Other varieties use Brathering, rollmops, European sprat, salmon, smoked Atlantic mackerel, fried Atlantic cod, and other fish varieties (e.g., fish burgers). Prawns are sometimes used, as are various other species of food fish.
In some regions (e. g. Holstein), it is served on dark bread with a cowberry and cream sauce. Soused herring can also be served with cream or yogurt sauces containing onions and gherkins, or in salads. In Sweden matjessill is traditionally served with boiled potatoes, sour cream, chopped chives, crisp bread and snaps.
Herring sandwich served in the Netherlands. Maatjesharing eaten "the Dutch way" Soused herring is raw herring soaked in a mild preserving liquid. It can be raw herring in a mild vinegar pickle or Dutch brined herring. As well as vinegar, the marinade might contain cider, wine or tea, sugar, herbs (usually bay leaf), spices (usually mace), and chopped onion.
The soused herring (maatjesharing or just maatjes in Dutch, or Matjes/matjes in German and Swedish respectively) is an especially mild salt herring, which is made from young immature herrings. The herrings are ripened for a couple of days in oak barrels in a salty solution, or brine. The pancreatic enzymes which support the ripening make this version of salt herring especially mild and soft. Raw herring pickled in vinegar are called rollmops.
Gibbing is the process of preparing salt herring (or soused herring), in which the gills and part of the gullet are removed from the fish, eliminating any bitter taste. The liver and pancreas are left in the fish during the salt- curing process because they release enzymes essential for flavor. The fish is then cured in a barrel with one part salt to 20 herring. Today many variations and local preferences exist on this process.
Stephanie warned Jackie Marone to stay away from Eric, although Stephanie encouraged Jackie's son, Nick Marone, to be with Brooke, and arranged for Nick and Brooke to be stranded on an island together. After Sally and Stephanie, who had become friends, drowned their sorrows, a soused Sally gave Stephanie a sloppy haircut. For Christmas, Stephanie gave Sally a locket with both their pictures inside. Stephanie and Brooke bonded briefly when Ridge was believed to be dead.
A good while later, she had not yet returned, so he went to look for a girl to hook up with, thinking his sister was with some guy. While stumbling around the frat house, completely soused, he happened upon a dark room with a girl. The boy joined her inside, lifted up her dress, and soon he was "enjoying" her. When he had his fun and the girl passed out, he switched on the light to see who she was.
Australian musicologist Glenn A. Baker described their sound as "rangy, loose-limbed, good-natured, energetic, self-effacing, intuitive, harmonic, melodic, enduring, soused and fiercely frantic". In September 1988, the band were promoting their second album, Fingertips, when Paul's infant daughter died of SIDS. Although devastated, the group continued with a lower profile, and Anthony left to resume his university studies yet returned periodically to record their later studio albums. Early in 1991 Anthony and Fatt founded a children's music group, The Wiggles.
In English, a "soused herring" can also be a cooked marinated herring. Rollmops are pickled herring fillets rolled (hence the name) into a cylindrical shape around a piece of pickled gherkin or an onion. They are thought to have developed as a special treat in 19th century Berlin,Erich Urban, Das Alphabet der Küche, Berlin 1929, Artikel Rollmops, S. 201 and the word borrowed from the German. Fish cured through pickling or salting have long been consumed in the British Isles.
Schickele divides P. D. Q. Bach's fictional musical output into three periods: the Initial Plunge, the Soused Period, and Contrition. During the Initial Plunge, Bach wrote the Traumerei for solo piano, an Echo Sonata for "two unfriendly groups of instruments", and a Gross Concerto for Divers Flutes, two Trumpets, and Strings. During the Soused (or Brown-Bag) Period, P. D. Q. Bach wrote a Concerto for Horn & Hardart (which was the name of a chain of automat restaurants), a Sinfonia Concertante, a Pervertimento for Bicycle, Bagpipes, and Balloons, a Serenude, a Perückenstück (literally German for "Wigpiece"), a Suite from The Civilian Barber (spoofing Rossini's The Barber of Seville), a Schleptet in E-flat major, the half-act opera The Stoned Guest (the character of "The Stone Guest" from Mozart's Don Giovanni, and the play by Pushkin), a Concerto for Piano vs. Orchestra, Erotica Variations (Beethoven's Eroica Variations), Hansel and Gretel and Ted and Alice, an opera in one unnatural act (Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel and the 1969 film Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice), The Art of the Ground Round (Bach's The Art of Fugue), a Concerto for Bassoon vs.
This process of preparing herring (known as "gibbing") was developed in the Middle Ages by the Dutch. Herrings are caught between the end of May and the beginning of July in the North Sea near Denmark or Norway, before the breeding season starts. This is because herrings at this time are unusually rich in oils (over 15%) and their roe and milt have not started to develop. The brine used for Dutch soused herring has a much lower salt content and is much milder in taste than the German Loggermatjes.
The vast necropolis contains the mass graves from the Battle of Borodino, the Battle of Moscow, and the Khodynka Tragedy. It is the burial site for a number of people from the artistic and sports community of Russia and the old Soviet Union. William Taubman claims that during the Great Purge "alcohol-soused guards would execute weeping prisoners" after they had dug their graves in the cemetery. The cemetery is served by several Orthodox churches constructed between 1819 and 1823 in the Muscovite version of the Empire style.
The song was well-received by critics, who welcomed the song's pop sound. Select declared it 'Single of the Month', writing: “Like ‘Electricity’ before it, ‘She’s in Fashion’ is gloriously shallow pop music. With a keyboard figure from a Tunisian tourist-board ad, it’s about as summery as getting pissed at the fairground." NME liked the music, saying: "Soused in acoustic guitar'd empathy, with a vaporous keyboard motif inescapably reminiscent of Duran Duran's 'Save A Prayer', 'She's In Fashion' is a balmy, barmy beaut, shimmering grooves turning a blithe eye to the world.
A by-product of the butter- making process, karnemelk (buttermilk), is also considered typical for this region. Seafood such as soused herring, mussels (called Zeeuwse Mossels, since all Dutch mussels for consumption are cleaned in Zeeland's Oosterschelde), eels, oysters and shrimps are widely available and typical for the region. Kibbeling, once a local delicacy consisting of small chunks of battered white fish, has become a national fast food, just as lekkerbek. Pastries in this area tend to be quite doughy, and often contain large amounts of sugar; either caramelised, powdered or crystallised.
189-91 > For the album cover Waits wanted to convey the film-noir mood that coloured > so many of the songs. Veteran Hollywood portraitist George Hurrell was hired > to shoot Waits, both alone and in a clutch with a shadowy female whose ring- > encrusted right hand clamped a passport to his chest. The back-cover shot of > Tom was particularly good, casting him as a slicked-back hoodlum--half > matinee idol, half hair-trigger psychopath. The inner sleeve depicted the > soused singer clawing at the keys of his Tropicana upright.
A herring Utensils used in 1966 in the process of gibbing on a lugger Gibbing is the process of preparing salt herring (or soused herring), in which the gills and part of the gullet are removed from the fish, eliminating any bitter taste. The liver and pancreas are left in the fish during the salt-curing process because they release enzymes essential for flavor. The fish is then cured in a barrel with one part salt to 20 herring. Today many variations and local preferences exist in this process.
The Municipal council of The Hague, recognized, with proposal 136, dated 23 March 1984, that the coat of arms as insigna of the Scheveningen village. Flag of Scheveningen Nowadays, the flag is commonly used in Scheveningen. It is possible to see the flag especially during the Vlaggetjesdag (in Dutch, flag day), with the arrival of the Hollandse nieuwe (in Dutch, Hollander new referred to the first soused herrings available of the season). However, the feast name has nothing to do with the flag of Scheveningen but is related to the ships' bunting shown by the fishing boats during Vlaggetjesdag.
In the Nordic countries, once the pickling process is finished and depending on which of the dozens of herring flavourings (mustard, onion, garlic, lingonberries etc.) are selected, it is eaten with dark rye bread, crisp bread, sour cream, or potatoes. This dish is common at Christmas, Easter and Midsummer, where it is frequently accompanied by spirits like akvavit. Soused herring (maatjesharing or just maatjes in Dutch) is an especially mild salt herring, which is made from young, immature herrings. The herrings are ripened for a couple of days in oak barrels in a salty solution, or brine.
From Trinidad the use of buljol has spread to other Caribbean islands (especially Barbados) and Trinidadian communities in English-speaking countries such as Canada, Great Britain and the United States. Skin and fishbones of the salty codfish are removed, then it is cooked or repeatedly soused with cooking water to remove as much of the salt as possible. The fish is then shredded and mixed with chopped tomatoes and chilies. Additional ingredients are added to taste with onions, bell peppers and olive oil being prevalent, but also garlic, hard-boiled eggs, lemon juice, lettuce, white wine and various herbs are used.
An acquired taste is an appreciation for something unlikely to be enjoyed by a person who has not had substantial exposure to it. It is the opposite of innate taste which is appreciation for things that are obviously enjoyable by most persons without prior exposure to them. In case of food and drink, the difficulty of enjoying the product may be due to a strong odor (such as certain types of cheese, durian, hákarl, black salt, nattō, asafoetida, surströmming, or stinky tofu), taste (alcoholic beverages, coffee, Vegemite or Marmite, bitter teas, liquorice/salty liquorice, malt bread, unsweetened chocolate, garnatálg, rakfisk, soused herring, haggis), mouthfeel (such as sashimi and sushi featuring uncooked seafood), appearance, or association (such as eating insects or organ meat).
" The relationship between the principal characters is "One of the delights of these books", where "Aubrey is a sailor in his blood and bones" and Maturin "remains a landlubber the non-seafaring reader can identify with." Bailey notes the use of letters home, a device used also by William Golding in his sea-faring trilogy To the Ends of the Earth, and finds that "O'Brian while telling his yarn writes like a man simply at home in a 500-ton frigate. All the naval minutiae of the early 19th century are evidently in his grasp, but like the Surprise's maintopsails, they are used to drive the book forward, a great show that also has cumulative effect." Bailey highlights many aspects of the plot, which issues are addressed by Aubrey, and which are handled by Maturin, and notes that in this novel, the officers have a particularly varied diet, including "a suicidal swordfish, soused pig's face and a Polynesian stew in which a human ear floats.
Middlemark donated millions to various educational foundations and trusts in a goal to give under-privileged students the ability to attend college. He was also known as a major giver to the New York area homeless shelters and at the time of his death 15,000 pairs of gloves which he personally ordered from China were delivered as his final act of giving. At the time of his death in 1989, the inventor's mansion in Old Westbury, New York was home to a collection that included two cathedral-size buildings on his property to display his collection of religious stained glass windows and even commissioned pieces displaying the likenesses of Marilyn Monroe and Albert Einstein. Middlemark was also an animal enthusiast, as his lifetime hobbies included Belmont-winning race horses, nine miniature horses (Middlemark is credited with the introduction of the miniature horses and miniature donkeys into the United States, bringing them in from Argentina), and even a chimpanzee named "Josie" who lived in an oversized cage in the basement of Middlemark's house and was known to answer the front door of his home and got soused at parties.

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