When fresh, it is a sweet, refreshing laxative, but the fermentation is so rapid that after a few hours it acquires the inebriating qualities of ordinary coconut toddy.
He nearly always has a little sugar cane on the farm but, when it is not intended for making an inebriating drink, it is planted only in sufficient quantity to furnish occasionally a few pieces to the members of the household.
Acvinau to the hero protected by them (that is, to the solar horse, to the morning sun), with his strong hoof fills a hundred jars with inebriating liquor.
The wine of the Hellenic and Latin myth corresponds to the inebriating drink or somas in which Indras delights so much in the Rigvedas.
Again; inebriating liquors have become the medium universally adopted by society for manifesting friendship and good will, one to another.
But before we go farther, it may be proper to analyze the terms, moderation and intemperance, as they relate to the use of inebriating drink.
This unnatural blending of virtue and vice, together with the practice of using inebriating drink as a table beverage, are the radical sources of that intemperance, which is said to be "the crying and increasing sin of the nation.
Wine and all inebriating liquors are strictly forbidden.
He was the only Muslim, however, whom I have heard to argue against the absolute interdiction of inebriating liquors.
It would seem that even Bacon's brain was not strong enough to bear without some discomposure the inebriating effect of so much good fortune.
The most rigid censor could not but make great allowances for the faults into which so young a man had been seduced by evil example, by the luxuriance of a vigorous fancy, and by the inebriating effect of popular applause.
On his pressing him a second time, he answered that 'he refused no sustenance but inebriating sustenance.
These persons call a thing made up of impure matter a face, and drink its charms as a drunkard swallows the inebriating liquor from his cup.
A Pepper-plant, from the root of which they prepare an inebriating liquor, Awa.
Vessel, a hollow vessel in which they prepare an inebriating liquor, Oo'mutte.
The drinking of wine, under which name all sorts of strong and inebriating liquors are comprehended, is forbidden in the Korân in more places than one.
Under the name of wine all sorts of strong and inebriating liquors are comprehended.
And the moderate use of wine they also think is allowed by these words of the 16th chapter, And of the fruits of palm-trees and grapes ye obtaininebriating drink, and also good nourishment.
Al Beidâwi And of the fruits of palm-trees, and of grapes, ye obtain an inebriating liquor, and also good nourishment.
That is, allinebriating liquors, and games of chance.
The use of wine and other inebriating drinks is forbidden by Islam,[188] and was punished by Muhammed with flogging.
When its inebriating quality took effect, I used in the elevation of my spirits to jest and laugh with the boy, and beguile my time.
Imagine that to-day a great European poet should describe and extol in magnificent verses the sensuous delight of smoking opium; should deify, in a mythology rich in imagery, the inebriating virtues of this product.
Macbride did not suspect any inebriating property in the nectar, and in a closing note there is a conjecture of an impalpable loose powder in S.
But upon cultivating plants of this species, obtained for the purpose, the existence of this lure was abundantly verified; and, although we cannot vouch for its inebriating quality, we can no longer regard it as unlikely.
Few of the chiefs decline the use of wine, and if the common people abstain from inebriating liquors, it is not from any religious motive.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "inebriating" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: alcoholic; heady; intoxicating