Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"sozzled" Definitions
  1. very drunk

37 Sentences With "sozzled"

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

Prostitution figured prominently, as did booze; sozzled women were a particular worry.
Take a swig whenever she swoons or seethes, and you'll be sozzled in no time.
" And she would reach full flower as another sozzled sidekick soon after as Joanne in Sondheim's "Company.
But by now the sozzled dancers are circling—it's late— The bonfire In the middle of the green.
Saturday night where you'll get sozzled to the point where you feel like you're Gary from The Libertines.
Neither does his awkward incursion into the dismal marriage of his lover (Katharina Schüttler) and her sozzled husband.
But it's probably why so few songs actually get to the sozzled beating heart of why nightlife actually matters.
He stormed back into the bedroom, where a sozzled Fulks sat on the bed alone, and demanded that he leave.
Many men work so late, or get so sozzled after work to relieve stress, that they don't make it home.
Fancy restaurants might lay on luxury AVs to ferry sozzled customers home, as part of the cost of a meal.
Stories were first spoken, and what better way to keep your slightly sozzled, firelit audience captivated than by having unexpected things happen?
Sozzled Helen Butcher left fellow passengers in tears after launching into a foul-mouthed rant on the TUI plane from Manchester to Kos.
Sozzled from the northern beers, we forge onward to the Réunion booth—despite the time difference, we are determined to taste the best rum.
Mundane scarcity and social pressures encroach on all the characters at all times, except maybe Gadappa, who manages to stay sozzled and mystical at the same time.
The drunkest stage is maybe a little more familiar: when they are well and truly sozzled, the crayfish flop down on their backs, and have trouble getting back up.
A sweater-wearing, Elvis-quoting naïf (the sublime John Keating) and a sozzled bride-to-be spend a night in a rural Irish trailer park in Laoisa Sexton's play.
This time, he's getting us a bit sozzled with a BAHAMA MAMA and a rousing game of BEER PONG, but at least we get a trip to Hawaii out of it (ALOHA TOWER).
Besides that, one colleague said he "looked as though he was slowly committing suicide" through drink, and when the challenge to Thatcher came, he was too sozzled to concentrate on the task in hand.
The Cadillac rolls down a gravel alley; the sozzled diplomats are hanging out the windows, waving and yelling goodbyes, until they vanish in the night and I am, once again, the only American on set.
Besides their tumultuous romantic relationship, their mutual heavy drinking provides a point of factual interest that pulls down our illusions of their art as pure painterly beauty into more sozzled suggestions of their messy habits.
But these kinds of remarks don't do much for readers who might be more interested in a scene of Ray at that Atlanta boardinghouse, with its sozzled proprietor, than a description of the author discovering this information.
Johnny Depp returns as the perpetually sozzled Jack Sparrow, heroically holding cirrhosis at bay with a gold-toothed grin and a wobbly swagger; Geoffrey Rush is back, too, as his high-seas frenemy, the squirrely, grasping Captain Barbossa.
" A man sitting nearby—daytime sozzled, with a few friends at a table covered with beer cans and a plate of chicaron bituka (deep fried pig's intestine)—suddenly chimes in: "I don't know why we like lechon so much.
As well as all that, I'd heard stories of complete debauchery in Newquay, which made the town sound like a place where taps run the colour of Irn Bru WKD and the streets are lined with sozzled beach bums engaging in all kind of nefarious activities.
Think about it: night after night you're dealing with an endless wave of lads and lassess who've stuffed themselves to the gills with drinks that definitely break EU regulations on E numbers who now, sozzled, wrecked, ruined, pissed up, hammered, blottoed, battered, cunted, fucked, steaming, want to drag themselves into your club.
This post ran originally on THUMP UK.What you're seeing there, if you can believe you're even seeing it in the first place, is the sorry sight of a young man so sozzled on moonshine, so hopped up on cheap spirit and mixer deals, so wildly off his nut on the fizziest of lagers and the sugariest of 4% alcopops that he's literally fallen asleep in a urinal .
The duo of John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman is unlike other radio broadcasts in the sense that where one team might employ a wild card—a play-by-play man prone to curlicues or puns or narcolepsy, say, or a benignly sozzled ex-player given to MC Escher-esque digression—the Yankees employ two of the most relentlessly, intensely weird broadcasters in the sport, at the same time.
None of it will seem terribly new to anyone who has had the experience of hearing some sozzled ex-ballplayer spend a half-inning coming really close to using ethnic slurs during a guest slot on some mid-summer broadcast; it is also very much in character for Gossage, a self-styled Old-School Guy who has looked like the disagreeable 51-year-old owner of a bar called Sticky's since he was 25 years old.
"Album Review: Julian Cope – Drunken Songs". BackseatMafia.com. 16 February 2017. Retrieved on 16 October 2018. Musically, "Don't Drink & Drive (You Might Spill Some)" revisits Autogeddon territory, but "the sozzled version", according to Backseat Mafia.Briandroid. "Album Review: Julian Cope – Drunken Songs". BackseatMafia.com. 16 February 2017. Retrieved on 16 October 2018. "On the Road to Tralee" effectively acts as Drunken Songs entire "side two". Aaron Badgley of Spill Magazine described the song as "an 18-minute ‘magical mystery tour’ of Ireland through an alcoholic gaze".
At the beginning of December 2003, one of high officials of the Internal Affairs Department of Ferghana region called Tadjibayeva in sozzled state and told her that she would be punished for her actions and that her days had been already numbered. On December 12, Mutabar Tadjibayeva came to the Ministry of Interior of the Republic of Uzbekistan and demanded the abatement of persecution against her. However, the agency's chief executives refused to receive her. The next day on her way to Ferghana region Mutabar Tadjibayeva had a car accident and spent 12 days in hospital.
In an interview with The Times in October 1970, Thatcher said: "I don't pretend that I'm anything but an honest-to-God right-winger—those are my views and I don't care who knows 'em." His public image was shaped by the satirical "Dear Bill" columns appearing since 1979 in Private Eye, which portrayed him as a "juniper-sozzled, rightwing, golf-obsessed halfwit", and Thatcher found it useful to play along with this image to avoid allegations of unduly influencing his wife in political matters. Given his professional background Thatcher served as an advisor on financial matters, warning Margaret about the poor condition of British Leyland after reviewing its books.
Patrick, after ensuring the absence of Graham, waits for her to come to his flat but she doesn't arrive. So Patrick has sex with a girl who, after Jenny's no-show, happens to knock on his door, a girl who is not only a schoolgirl but is also his headmaster's daughter. It would now appear that Patrick and Jenny have broken up, but at a boozy and somewhat riotous party at Julian's house, Patrick takes advantage, in the early hours, of a tired and sozzled Jenny in one of the guest bedrooms. Julian is disapproving of Patrick's behaviour and is sympathetic to Jenny, who is at first very upset and says she never wants to see Patrick again.
Dear Bill consisted of spoof letters from Denis Thatcher to his friend Bill Deedes, editor of the Daily Telegraph, about life in 10 Downing Street with Margaret Thatcher. The series portrayed Denis as a sozzled right-wing alcoholic staggering between snifters, with various friends, many of whom, like Bill and Denis, played golf. The putative author was often commanded to accompany his wife on various tours—at home and abroad; electioneering, political and statesmanlike, plus "very" occasional holidays; Denis has his own slant on everywhere he goes, and often meets an old chummo with whom he can partake of a libation or two. The column was written by Richard Ingrams and John Wells.
" In May 2016, All About Soap's Mark James Lowe praised Elmaloglou and her character, stating: "In a street occupied by saintly Susan and vanilla Lauren, we thoroughly enjoy Rebekah Elmaloglou's depiction of multi-layered Terese. Mrs Willis's grief and pain over losing son Josh has been heartbreaking – and we know it's bad, but we love when Terese gets sozzled." A Sunday Mail reporter observed that Terese was "humiliated and abandoned" following the trial, so she "hits rock bottom". Johnathon Hughes of the Radio Times praised the character during her cancer battle, writing "Neighbours' matriarch Terese Willis is one of the toughest women Ramsay Street has ever seen, and she's certainly had to be in recent months during her brave battle with breast cancer.
Once Sarah has become accustomed to the ship's motion, she heads out onto the deck to take photographs, but Alex slips up behind her unnoticed, knocks her out and throws her overboard. The Doctor sees her in the water and leaps in after her—but when Andrews tries to turn around for them, the sozzled Hogben takes offence at Andrews’ changing course without orders and orders him to resume his heading, leaving the Doctor and Sarah behind. The Brigadier once again threatens Hogben with court-martial and worse, but this time Hogben refuses to give in—and the Brigadier thus punches him, knocking him out, and tells the rest of the crew that he's fainted. The crew decide not to ask questions, and change course.
Ellams moved into cash-in- hand poetry performance and selling his books as a way to make a living and help his mother to educate his sisters through university while his father was unable to work. Robinson mentored Ellams for his first solo play, The 14th Tale, produced by Fuel Theatre, which took a chance on Ellams despite him not having a work permit in the UK. Ellams had a gig at a sodden Glastonbury Festival, playing to a sozzled crowd. Ellams attended a Royal garden party at the Buckingham Palace at the invitation of Queen Elizabeth II, with Goldie and Andrew Marr, while under threat of deportation by the Home Office. Despite this, the Home Office refuses to recognize Ellams, or the rest of his family, as British citizens.
Sparrow is listed by IGN as one of their ten favorite film outlaws, as he "lives for himself and the freedom to do whatever it is that he damn well pleases. Precious few film characters have epitomized what makes the outlaw such a romantic figure for audiences as Captain Jack Sparrow has." Entertainment Weekly put it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "Part Keith Richards rift, part sozzled lounge lizard, Johnny Depp's swizzleshtick pirate was definitely one of the most dazzling characters of the decade."Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (December 11, 2009), "The 100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows, Albums, Books, Characters, Scenes, Episodes, Songs, Dresses, Music Videos, and Trends That Entertained Us over the Past 10 Years".

No results under this filter, show 37 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.