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34 Sentences With "tippling"

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

Strawberry-Jalapeno Non-a-Rita (or Margarita) A fruity, spicy syrup forms the base for what can either be a zippy nonalcoholic "mocktail" or a standard tequila-enhanced margarita variation, thus allowing you to satisfy both tippling and non-tippling guests.
The Pinewood Tippling RoomIf your Twitter bio says "whiskey enthusiast," this is the place for you.
Matthew Brook, a bass-baritone, was especially entertaining as the Drunken Poet, tippling lustily into his first entry.
Affordable tippling: $13 cans of Tecate, an assortment of wine for $10 or less; cocktails like the Fernet old-fashioned go for $12.
You can barely swing an empty bottle in an American theater without hitting a classic tale of the perils of tippling and other bad habits.
But here's the thing: All of the studies mentioned above—indeed, nearly every study that seems to condemn post-workout imbibing—involve binge drinking, not responsible tippling.
Another is a problem for your employers, not so much because it's a breach of their rules as because the afternoon tippling is probably affecting her work.
What little would remain of the Qajar portraits of topless wine-tippling belles and the Safavid frescoes of Esfahan's palaces, brimming with scenes of drunken revelry, had there not been any cupbearers?
This outlook may be traced, in part, to the misery of her Southern childhood, to her charming, tippling, manic-depressive rake of a father and her bitter mother, who lost her looks early and died in her 50s.
Eisenman remains close, she told me, to the "Eisenman clan," including two brothers and a centenarian great-aunt who is the subject of her painting "Death and the Maiden" (2009), as a blowsy nude tippling wine at a table with a patient and even tenderly companionable death figure.
Some historians suggest an affinity with the New York City nightclub-restaurant hybrid of that era, which used food, music and dance to camouflage illegal tippling; as Dave Hoekstra wrote in "The Supper Club Book" (2013), one Wisconsin supper club kept lockers on hand where regulars could hide their liquor (fitting, considering the etymology of supan).
Conecuh Ridge is described as an "Alabama Style Tippling Whiskey", a rather imprecise designation which basically means that it is patterned after the spirits that would have been available at informal "tippling houses". Clyde May used spring water from Southern Alabama and added oven-dried apples to his barrels. The resulting hints of green apple and cinnamon not only made it smoother than other whiskeys—they’re what made it Alabama Style. It is then aged for five to six years in heavy-toast charred white oak barrels.
The messenger, returning laden up the aisle, was ejected by the Rev. John Disney with the words Neither Bishop nor Archbishop shall make a tippling house of St. Mary's so long as I am its Vicar.
His brother, Shadrach, was also elected to the House, representing their native Cocke County. Charles Inman's House assignments for the 1867–1869 term included the Committee on Finance, Ways and Means, the Committee on Military Affairs, and the Committee on Tippling and Tippling Houses.House Journal of the First Session of the Thirty-Fifth General Assembly of the State of Tennessee (S.C. Mercer, 1868), pp. 43–44. In October 1867, he introduced a bill that would appropriate funds for the establishment of a hospital in Knoxville.House Journal, p. 79.
Thompson's two 2009 films were both set in 1960s England, and in both she made cameo appearances: as a headmistress in the critically praised drama An Education and as a "tippling mother" in Richard Curtis's The Boat That Rocked.
Arnaldo Tamburini (1843 - 1901) was an Italian painter, with a predilection for painting humorous scenes of tippling monks or anachronistic priests. he was active in Florence. A portrait of Umberto I is found in the Royal Palace of Pisa.Istituto Matteucci, short biography.
He exhibited frequently in England.Il Valore dei dipinti italiani dell'Ottocento e del primo del Novecento, by Giuseppe Luigi Marini (2001), Page 254. One of his paintings, a genre scene with tippling elderly peasants is found at the Hillwood museum.Collection of Hillwood museum.
Comparatively, brewing and tippling were predominantly female trades that women could operate independently or in equal conjunction with their husband. Following the Black Plague of 1347–50, the brewing trade underwent significant changes that made it a commercialized and specialized trade. Medieval society underwent many changes following the Plague.
357, etc. He wrote another work, "On Tippling",Athenaeus, xi. 483 in which he recommended this practice. He is frequently mentioned by Galen, and generally in favourable terms; as also by Rufus of Ephesus, Aulus Gellius,Aulus Gellius, xiii. 30 Soranus of Ephesus,Soranus, De Arte Obstetr. pp.
It provided that the Justices of the Peace were given power within their jurisdiction to stop the common selling of ale and beer in common ale-houses and tippling-houses, where they felt it to be appropriate and convenient. No-one was to be permitted to keep an ale-house without being so licensed by the Justices at Quarter Sessions, and the Justices were to take bond and surety of the keepers of common ale-houses and tippling-houses. This surety was to prevent the playing of unlawful games as well as for the maintenance of public order. Common selling of ale in booths at a fair by any person was permitted, however, "for the relief of the King's subjects that shall repair to the same", notwithstanding the rest of the Act.
As this "would serve for the relief of many poor people, Corbet was ordered to restrict their brewing to the minimum necessary for their customers and to forbid tippling and disorderly drinking in the said alehouses." Despite the ambiguities in his record, Corbet was appointed Knight of the Order of the Bath on the accession of James I in 1603.
During May 2004, he was one of the sources for a Larry Rohter story on Lula's alleged alcoholism; he told a New York Times correspondent about having advised Lula "to get hold of this thing and control it"."Brazilian Leader's Tippling Becomes National Concern". New York Times, May 09 2004, . Retrieved June 01 2013 Brizola died on June 21, 2004, after a heart attack.
She spent her remaining days teaching music and elocution. "Vi[olet] always helped Nell in her schools though one pupil's memory was of her often tippling on the sly and her... nephew... thought her distinctly dotty as she grew older!" By 1931, she was working as a governess for four young children. She died on 26 December 1941, at the Albuera Street address whilst Nellie died in the New Norfolk Asylum in July 1935 from arteriosclerosis.
There were no political parties, and would-be legislators formed ad hoc coalitions of their families, friends, and neighbors. Outside of Puritan New England, election day brought in all the men from the countryside to the county seat to make merry, politick, shake hands with the grandees, meet old friends, and hear the speeches—all the while toasting, eating, treating, tippling, and gambling. They voted by shouting their choice to the clerk, as supporters cheered or booed. Candidate George Washington spent £39 for treats for his supporters.
In addition to vast swaths of farm land and commercial buildings, he acquired the famous Crooked Billet Tavern and Inn, and surrounding land, which demonstrate the extent to which he expanded. In Philadelphia's early years there were no separate buildings which served as dance halls, theaters, or clubs — taverns, instead, provided all-purpose service. Until the Revolutionary War era, taverns and inns were the largest public buildings in Philadelphia. Drinking establishments in Colonial Philadelphia, be they in the form of coffee houses, taverns, or unlicensed "tippling houses", were more than places to drink and dine.
The "pickleback" has spread internationally, particularly in the English-speaking world, with many bars now offering picklebacks on their menus. The drink has had significant success in Aberdeen, Scotland, thanks to their reputed popularity among staff of the craft brewer BrewDog whose flagship bar is in the city. This has resulted in city establishment "The Tippling House" having to increase their nightly supply of pickle brine to ensure that the drink can stay available. British visitors returning to the United Kingdom from New York City introduced the recipe to bars in both London (as early as 2011), and Devon.
He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in (1973) for his role as Phil Green in Save the Tiger (his co-star Jack Lemmon won for Best Actor). Sir Rudolf Bing engaged Gilford for the comic speaking role of the tippling jailer Frosch in the operetta Die Fledermaus. Loved in the part, Gilford performed it 77 times between 1950 and 1964. One of Gilford's specialties was pantomime, and this talent was put to good use by director George Abbott when he cast Gilford as the silent King Sextimus in Once Upon a Mattress (Off-Broadway, 1959).
Women's role in the medieval ale industry likely grew out of the traditional household responsibilities of wives and daughters, who had to brew ale to feed to their families. To turn a profit, early medieval women became "small-scale retailers" by selling goods they already produced for private consumption.Simon A. C. Penn, "Female Wage-Earners in Late Fourteenth-Century England," The Agricultural History Review 35, No. 1 (1987): 6. Brewing and selling ale (also known as tippling or tapping) enabled women to work for and achieve "good profits, social power, and some measure of independence from men" that other trades at the time did not.Bennett (1991), 168.
In September 1793, a large force of Chickamaugas and Creeks marched on Knoxville, and massacred the inhabitants of Cavet's Station (near modern Bearden) before dispersing. Outlaws roamed the city's periphery, among them the Harpe Brothers, who murdered at least one settler in 1797 before fleeing to Kentucky. Abishai Thomas, an associate of Blount who visited Knoxville in 1794, noted that the city was full of taverns and tippling houses, no churches, and that the blockhouse's jail was overcrowded with criminals. In 1795, James White set aside more land for the growing city, allowing it to expand northward to modern Clinch Avenue and westward to modern Henley Street.
Tommy Gander (Arthur Askey), a vaudeville comedian, pulls the communication cord on a GWR express train, bringing it to a stop so he can retrieve his hat. Returning to the train, he escapes an angry conductor by ducking into a compartment occupied by attractive blonde Jackie Winthrop (Carole Lynne), with whom Gander flirts. Another passenger, Teddy (Richard Murdoch), has his eye on Jackie as well, but her companion Richard Winthrop (Peter Murray-Hill) ejects both of them from the compartment. When the train stops at Fal Vale Junction, Cornwall, these four get off to change trains, as do Herbert (Stuart Latham) and his fiancée Edna (Betty Jardine), spinster Miss Bourne (Kathleen Harrison), and the tippling Dr. Sterling (Morland Graham).
Some canes, known as "tippling canes" or "tipplers", have hollowed-out compartments near the top where flasks or vials of alcohol could be hidden and sprung out on demand. When used as a mobility or stability aid, canes are generally used in the hand opposite the injury or weakness. This may appear counter-intuitive, but this allows the cane to be used for stability in a way that lets the user shift much of their weight onto the cane and away from their weaker side as they walk. Personal preference, or a need to hold the cane in their dominant hand, means some cane users choose to hold the cane on their injured side.
All Gas and Gaiters, predominantly farcical in nature, was set in the close of the fictional St Oggs Cathedral and concerned various intrigues and rivalries among the clergy in the Church of England. The bishop was easygoing; his friend the archdeacon was elderly, tippling, and still appreciative of attractive women; and the bishop's chaplain was naïve and accident-prone. Their wish to live a quiet bachelor life was continually threatened by the overbearing dean, who tried to bring by-the-book rule to the cathedral. The title is a pun, deriving from a comic expression uttered by an eccentric character in Charles Dickens' 1839 novel Nicholas Nickleby, and later used by such writers as P. G. Wodehouse, Agatha Christie, and Powell and Pressburger (spoken in the film The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp).
Wakeman, p.23-24 However, if there was an onslaught on innocent pleasures, it did not last long. Corbet was also present at the next Quarter sessions, when, fresh from Baxter's sermon, the bench suppressed no ales sellers but granted a new licence to sell ale to one Richard Wicherley of Berghill.Wakeman, p.26 The pattern was much the same throughout the centuryLloyd Kenyon, p.xxi and had little to do with specifically Puritan preoccupations. In 1640 a grand jury had set out guidelines for the corporations and justices: essentially to reduce ale outlets to a reasonable number and to enforce weights and measures legislation.Wakeman, p.3 There was also a concern about “tippling” on Sunday, expressed in 1707Lloyd Kenyon, p.231 as much as in 1652.Wakeman, p.
A minor role in Alfred Hitchcock's 1949 British production Under Capricorn was followed the next year by her most widely admired and best-known screen performance in the critically acclaimed Boulting Brothers-directed Seven Days to Noon, as Goldie Phillips, the woman who helps the desperate Professor Willingdon (Barry Jones). The character of Goldie was written as an ageing ex-chorus girl - brassy, excessively made-up and cheaply and gaudily dressed, whiling away her days gossiping and tippling in local public houses. Although not explicitly stated, the script strongly implied that Goldie relied on casual prostitution to make ends meet. With the open and unquestioning way in which she offered assistance and shelter to Willingdon, and her devotion to her little dog Trixie, Goldie came across as a cheerful, good-hearted soul and Sloane's performance earned much praise from critics for the mixture of humour and pathos she brought to Goldie's character, in a way that a younger or more glamorous actress would have been unlikely to have been able to achieve.

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