inebriated
adjective
[ ɪnˈiːbrɪeɪtɪd ]
• drunk; intoxicated.
• "I got mildly inebriated"
Similar:
drunk,
intoxicated,
inebriate,
drunken,
tipsy,
the worse for drink,
under the influence,
blind drunk,
dead drunk,
rolling drunk,
roaring drunk,
as drunk as a lord,
as drunk as a skunk,
sottish,
gin-soaked,
tight,
merry,
the worse for wear,
pie-eyed,
three sheets to the wind,
plastered,
smashed,
hammered,
sloshed,
soused,
sozzled,
well oiled,
paralytic,
wrecked,
wasted,
blotto,
stewed,
pickled,
tanked up,
soaked,
blasted,
ratted,
off one's face,
out of one's head,
out of one's skull,
legless,
bevvied,
Brahms and Liszt,
half cut,
out of it,
lashed,
bladdered,
trolleyed,
mullered,
slaughtered,
well away,
squiffy,
tiddly,
out of one's box,
fou,
loaded,
trashed,
out of one's gourd,
blitzed,
ripped,
jacked,
turnt,
in one's cups,
lit up,
tired and emotional,
sotted,
foxed,
screwed,
crapulent,
crapulous,
bibulous,
ebriate,
pissed,
rat-arsed,
arseholed,
Origin:
early 17th century: from inebriate + -ed2.
inebriate
verb
• make (someone) drunk; intoxicate.
• "it is a rum-based drink designed more to inebriate the masses than to please the palate"
Origin:
late Middle English (as an adjective): from Latin inebriatus, past participle of inebriare ‘intoxicate’ (based on ebrius ‘drunk’).