Definition of Intoxicates

1. Verb. (third-person singular of intoxicate) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Intoxicates

1. intoxicate [v] - See also: intoxicate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Intoxicates

intorted
intorting
intortion
intortions
intortor
intorts
intown
intoxation
intoxicant
intoxicants
intoxicate
intoxicated
intoxicatedlike
intoxicatedly
intoxicatedness
intoxicates
intoxicating
intoxicatingly
intoxication
intoxications
intoximeter
intoximeters
intr
intra
intra-
intra-abdominal
intra-abdominal abscess
intra-acinous
intra-adenoidal

Literary usage of Intoxicates

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"... one sip of which delights, but which never cloys or intoxicates, drink we never so deep. The secret of his style is after all its purity and simplicity. ..."

2. The Reminiscences of Lady Dorothy Nevill by Dorothy Nevill, Ralph Nevill (1906)
"... Wilberforce and his wit—Mr. Brookfield and Dicky Doyle—Adelaide Kemble—Harrison Weir—The Rev. MB Berkeley intoxicates some ladies— Mr. Wilson's ..."

3. Paxton's Botanical Dictionary: Comprising the Names, History, and Culture of by Joseph Paxton (1868)
"B. officinal ¡is when fresh intoxicates, aud the dried leaves excite sneezing. Red. . 7, H. Her. P. 11 8. Eur. . 1759 Purp. . 6, H. Her. P. if Siberia . ..."

4. Tobacco: What it Is, and what it Does by Dan King (1861)
"Intoxicates the nursing infant—Causes nervous affections, Amaurosis, Deafness, etc—Weakens the recuperative powers.—Use of long pipes.—Tobacco Dyspepsia. ..."

5. History of the Great Reformation of the Sixteenth Century: In Germany by J. H. Merle d'Aubigné (1844)
"... flattery intoxicates him, and his head grows dizzy. What he possesses impels him to aspire after more. Aa soon as the notion of a supposed necessity fix ..."

6. Your Light "the Evening and the Morning," by Robert Henry Bowman (1915)
"The impure blood intoxicates and poisons, the same as does whisky, and when indulged in becomes unsatisfying, and the end thereof is death (unconsciousness) ..."

7. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"... one sip of which delights, but which never cloys or intoxicates, drink we never so deep. The secret of his style is after all its purity and simplicity. ..."

8. The Reminiscences of Lady Dorothy Nevill by Dorothy Nevill, Ralph Nevill (1906)
"... Wilberforce and his wit—Mr. Brookfield and Dicky Doyle—Adelaide Kemble—Harrison Weir—The Rev. MB Berkeley intoxicates some ladies— Mr. Wilson's ..."

9. Paxton's Botanical Dictionary: Comprising the Names, History, and Culture of by Joseph Paxton (1868)
"B. officinal ¡is when fresh intoxicates, aud the dried leaves excite sneezing. Red. . 7, H. Her. P. 11 8. Eur. . 1759 Purp. . 6, H. Her. P. if Siberia . ..."

10. Tobacco: What it Is, and what it Does by Dan King (1861)
"Intoxicates the nursing infant—Causes nervous affections, Amaurosis, Deafness, etc—Weakens the recuperative powers.—Use of long pipes.—Tobacco Dyspepsia. ..."

11. History of the Great Reformation of the Sixteenth Century: In Germany by J. H. Merle d'Aubigné (1844)
"... flattery intoxicates him, and his head grows dizzy. What he possesses impels him to aspire after more. Aa soon as the notion of a supposed necessity fix ..."

12. Your Light "the Evening and the Morning," by Robert Henry Bowman (1915)
"The impure blood intoxicates and poisons, the same as does whisky, and when indulged in becomes unsatisfying, and the end thereof is death (unconsciousness) ..."

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