¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inebrieties
1. inebriety [n] - See also: inebriety
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inebrieties
Literary usage of Inebrieties
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Non-heredity of Inebriety by Leslie E. Keeley (1896)
"But science differentiates the inebrieties into special and single kinds and
gives each a single cause. Arsenic, alcohol, opium, ether, and hasheesh are ..."
2. The Chicago Medical Journal and Examiner (1886)
"Cocaine in the Alcohol and Opium inebrieties.— Much has been written upon the
use of .this drug in efforts to cure this form of nerve mal-nutrition. ..."
3. Autobiography of Henry Taylor, 1800-1875 by Henry Taylor (1885)
"Generally, as I have said, my inebrieties were nocturnal only, and the day paid
the penalty of the night's excess. But for these never-to-be-forgotten three ..."
4. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1902)
"Tea, coffee, tobacco, are each treated as inebrieties, and given considerable
space, though alcohol is not considered at all. We would have preferred more ..."
5. Correspondence of Henry Taylor by Henry Taylor, Edward Dowden (1888)
"... on the other hand, have I the inebrieties of the imagination which belonged
to those days— the exuberance of nervous enjoyment, such as people speak of ..."
6. Search-light Letters by Robert Grant (1899)
"... there would seem to be some reason why we should be willing to bear the brunt
of man's inebrieties a little longer; but really, my dear philosopher, ..."