Oh, no, after your long ride you'll prefer a whiskeyand soda.
Now, relieved of the incubus that had hitherto spoiled his enjoyment of the evening, the Colonel gratefully drank the whiskey and soda brought him by Ross's order and sat down cheerfully to play bridge.
Bring a whiskey and soda for the Commanding officer.
Chaplin, put somewhiskey and water in the study, and light the little lamp on my literary machine.
I ought to have let him have that whiskey and soda.
There he leaned over the splendid bar and swallowed a glass of plain whiskey and purchased a couple of cigars, one of which he lighted.
One was a cashier wanted in a wholesale furniture house, and the other a salesman for a whiskey house.
A whiskey bottle standing on the table relieved us of any embarrassment we might otherwise have felt for calling at so late an hour.
Two fellows got too much of the sutler's whiskey to-day.
Some get a dose of whiskey and quinine, some are ordered to the hospital and some are told to report for duty again.
The officers in charge of them paid more attention to a demijohn of whiskey they had than to the men.
Now that the whiskey was gone, the most of them were willing and anxious to be decent, but were in such mortal terror of the ringleaders that they dared not make a move to bring them to justice.
Baltimore whiskey got into the camp some way and these men found it.
Whiskey is the worst of them and leads to the others.
His abilities won the admiration of the men and his habits of life made him feared,--it was another case of what whiskey can do with a man.
He knew that the office called for erect deportment, so the bench straightened his figure and impressively began the reprimand: "W-whiskey is-s a bad thing.
At the afternoon meeting the spirit of whiskey showed itself in many disturbances.
Even Solomon could not have chosen a more timely illustration, for the judge vividly set forth in his own person what whiskey could do for a man, and the woodsman appreciated the force of the advice.
There were several camps near Island Lake, and on the Sunday that Frank Higgins visited the camps there the boys had been "tanking up" with squirrel whiskey from early morn.
Burns lived on whiskey for weeks together, supplemented by tobacco, which caused Byron to say that he was "a strange compound of dirt and deity.
Burns was sadly addicted to whiskey and tobacco, which led Byron, as we have already said, to call him "a strange compound of dirt and deity.
He put his hand in his pocket for a match; there was none; and his clothes felt damp, then a fresh whiskey odor entered his nostrils.
When he recovered consciousness the smell of tar and whiskey was strong about him.
Bed-sores may generally be prevented by frequently changing the position of the patient, by scrupulous attention to cleanliness, and by bathing prominent parts of his body with whiskey and alum.
I am sure I have often derived benefit from enemas consisting of four ounces of well-prepared beef essence with a half ounce of whiskey or brandy and a half ounce of strong infusion of coffee.
Generally, however, it will be necessary to have recourse to whiskey or brandy.
As convalescence progresses it will be well to substitute ale or porter for the brandy or whiskey the patient had previously taken.
In cases where a tendency to the development of the typhoid state existed alcohol was freely given, even to the extent of sixteen ounces of whiskey in twenty-four hours.
In addition to these, sinapisms may be applied to the epigastrium, and champagne, when the circumstances of the patient will permit it, should be given in the place of whiskey or brandy.
As a rule, whiskey was employed, given in the form of milk punch.
In many cases wine or whiskey will be indicated from the beginning, the quantity being determined rather by the effect upon the circulation and the general condition of the case than by rule.
I have rarely myself found it necessary to prescribe more than half an ounce of whiskey or brandy every two hours, and frequently a very much smaller quantity has been found sufficient.
Brandy, wine, and whiskey may be advantageously used as stimulants.
Let them see that you are rational beings, and they will become rational in imitation of you; but take no whiskey there at all, not even for the officers, for fear their generosity would let it out.
The Whiskey Fiend, Prayer of Mary Queen of Scots, &c.
Dropping his aggressive tone to mere querulousness, the man sought the whiskey demijohn, and helped himself and his companions.
But you have had a long ride, Mr. Thompson; let me offer you a glass ofwhiskey in the dining-room.
I doubt if his intention had been suicide, but had it been he could hardly have chosen a more deadly weapon than the whiskey of those days.
She ran and got the two decanters-one of whiskey and one of brandy, which he was in the habit of carrying back to his room from such an incursion.
Merely that I'm going to drink a glass ofwhiskey and a glass of brandy for every glass that you drink to-night.
And he has another idea, which is to go and trade his last bottle of Scotch whiskey and his last horse-blanket to the principal chief of that region and buy a piece of land the size of Pennsylvania.
The tonnage of man is estimated by the amount of whiskey he can displace in a day.
He said, "Yes, but when I have drunk all the whiskey I want I can't say sarsaparilla.
Whiskey and hot water were brought in, that we might all drink luck to the second venture.
The other men were scattered about the room, one or two writing at tables, three or four reading the evening papers, and the rest talking and sipping whiskey and water, or only talking or only sipping whiskey and water.
There were one or two old soldiers on the jury, and they acquitted him, on which he somehow managed to get whiskey enough to land him back in jail in twenty-four hours.
I raided Dave's cache of whiskey or I'd have been here quicker," Jerry explained.
There might be tobacco or whiskey left behind, or something with color or a shine to it.
Yesterday, while I was here, your husband ransacked my house an' found a quart of whiskey I had.
Ned Lytton lay across the bed, face downward, breathing muffled by the tumbled blankets, and on the floor beside him was an empty whiskey bottle.
As pioneers the Mormons were superior to any class I have ever come in contact with, their idea being home-making and not skimming the cream off the country with a six-shooter and a whiskey bottle.
Some of them also make whiskey from the ripe cherries.
AN eminent spirit-merchant in Dublin announced, in one of the Irish papers, that he has still a small quantity of the whiskey on sale which was drunk by his late Majesty while in Dublin.
As if suddenly changing his mind, he declared he should prefer two pen'orth ofwhiskey instead.
Cider (called champaigne) could be purchased for three dollars a bottle, and whiskey came to hand occasionally.
I was able to give each of the officers a drop of whiskey from my flask, and I never saw men drink so thirstily.
He gave me, however, a couple of hard crackers and a draught of whiskey and quinine, whereby I rallied for a moment.
Pipes, cold ham, a keg of beer, and a demijohn of whiskey comprised the attractions of the night.
You will find a decanter of the Scotch whiskeyyou gave me last Christmas on the tray.
What a fool--what a fool whiskey in a man's tongue is--what a fool.
You will understand that the same obstacle would be encountered in grasping a limb and lifting himself upward, for a lad who drinkswhiskey and smokes cigarettes can never be enough of an athlete to draw himself upward with a single arm.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "whiskey" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: booze; carriage; gin; spirits; whiskey