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inebriated

drunk

/ɪˈniː.bɹi.eɪ.tɪd/

Adjective

A formal, clinical, or polite alternative to "drunk." It strips away the raw, often chaotic energy of drunkenness and replaces it with a sense of detached observation. While "drunk" can be celebratory or sloppy, "inebriated" is typically used in legal documents, police reports, or high-society contexts where direct language would be considered uncouth or too blunt. It suggests a state of being overwhelmed by alcohol rather than the active choice of drinking. It carries a cold, descriptive tone that distances the speaker from the subject.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon in a high-rise office during a board meeting.
Mr. Sterling

The lead investor seems quite inebriated. Is he dancing with the curtains?

Mr. Sterling
Victoria
Victoria

He's just out of it, sir. Please stop texting me.

💡
Mr. Sterling uses the formal word 'inebriated' to describe a chaotic scene with his typical detachment, while Victoria uses the phrasal verb 'out of it' (meaning mentally disconnected or intoxicated) to dismissively correct him and maintain professionalism during a meeting.

Meanings

Adjectivedrunk

Intoxicated by alcohol; drunk.

"He was too inebriated to remember how he got home from the party."

Etymology

Derived from the Latin word inebriatus, which is the past participle of inebriare, meaning to intoxicate. This is further rooted in ebrius, meaning drunk, combined with the intensive prefix in-. The term entered English in the 17th century to describe a state of alcoholic impairment.

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Last Updated: June 9, 2026Report an Error