Boozy in a sentence as an adjective

Take a boozy trip to the hamptons a couple times in the summer, take your LA trip, go to europe.

British trains are already pretty boozy places, not sure we need more people getting drunk and rowdy.

Go hiking, do yoga, or catch up on your social life in an active way, like a pub crawl or one of the boozy bicycle group tours.

Hence you could have the case of there being what happens a lot in other countries, a boozy night out, consensual sex, followed by remorse the next day. However you can then charge the man with rape.

I don't know, I havn't really thought this out. Maybe I'm over complicating it - I do that when I'm boozy!Either way, it sounds like it could be a fun way to play with the Amazon API.

And when people who enjoy boozy parties try to judge them it's all to easy to dismiss the problems because it's just so damned much fun for them.

Sports were cancelled?But because they can't get a boozy brunch, they are paying attention and suddenly, in some municipalities, things are changing for law enforcement, and the word of that and what is possible is spreading to others.

Or maybe we're organising a work party, and it would normally be a slightly boozy affair in a bar, but we know someone doesn't drink because they're pregnant/alcoholic/religious/don't like it/training for a marathon, so we might do something a bit different, like take everyone for a bbq on the beach.

Boozy definitions

adjective

given to or marked by the consumption of alcohol; "a bibulous fellow"; "a bibulous evening"; "his boozy drinking companions"; "thick boozy singing"; "a drunken binge"; "two drunken gentlemen holding each other up"; "sottish behavior"

See also: bibulous drunken sottish