Intoxicating in a sentence as an adjective

Plus, the competition to be the best can be intoxicating.

It's intoxicating, working with such an elegant tool.

The idea of a 30" piece of glass running multitouch software is intoxicating.

This is not a bad thing, but for someone young, the level of responsibility can be intoxicating.

That's why it's eating other language's lunches, the freedom is almost intoxicating.

That made the doses you received all that much more intoxicating?All I am saying is that a particular environment can affect someone in unexpected ways.

Because smoked ********* is only intoxicating for 4 - 6 hours, ideally we want to use a test that will only pop positive if someone has used the drug within the last 4 - 6 hours.

Otherwise good kids get caught up in the wrong environment, find acceptance within a peer group, and then become seduced by the intoxicating taste of power over others.

I was able to drink for the social aspect, it quenched any thirst I had, and at a slow pace because I was playing a lot of pool, it didn't end up intoxicating me all that much.

Rumor has it he started singing down a megaphone in the general direction of the Russians "You're beautiful"... like a siren of the sea the Russians fell under his intoxicating spell as surrendered the air field.

"Unlike with Al Capone, we're not talking about flooding the streets with an intoxicating liquid, we're talking about to something that should be a basic human right here: the right to educate yourself through accessing our communal pool of knowledge.

"The power and precision of the right word at the right moment can be intoxicating"Not only intoxicating but immensely powerful - we live in an age where politics is dominated by form rather than content, "spin" and being "on message" are more important that policies.

The reason our government was set up the way it was, and not the way it exists now, was precisely because the greatest group of political scientists to ever congregate in one place and time realized that people are inherently flawed, weak, and susceptible to the intoxicating effects of power.

Intoxicating definitions

adjective

causing

See also: intoxicant

adjective

extremely exciting as if by alcohol or a narcotic

See also: heady