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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a boozer" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to someone who drinks alcohol excessively or frequently, often in a casual or informal context.
Example: "After years of partying, he became known as a boozer among his friends."
Alternatives: "a heavy drinker" or "an alcoholic".
Exact(58)
One actress is "a boozer".
A shoot-out in a boozer?
"The first was such a boozer," Masha said.
Handler is a "dry, just-rolled-out-of-bed" humorist, a boozer who posed for Playboy.
I had my second taste of tom kha gai in a boozer in Bolton.
He is, in other words, a boozer and an eccentric — an old-fashioned, classically English type.
Why? His merchant seaman father was a boozer who seriously abused his mother, a cleaner.
I tell him I assumed he'd be a boozer, like Smithy.
"We're not a gastropub, we're a boozer that does good food," explains Grady.
Similar(2)
Plough & Harrow, Monknash, Vale of Glamorgan A peach of a boozer that has won a ledgeful of awards including Camra's Best Pub in Wales 2003.
Zarqawi was a high school dropout, known around town as a boozer and a brawler, certainly not as a pious man, let alone a fundamentalist.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com