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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a considerably drunk" is not correct in standard written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is very intoxicated, but the phrasing is awkward and not commonly used.
Example: "After the party, he was a considerably drunk man, stumbling down the street."
Alternatives: "quite drunk" or "very intoxicated".
Exact(1)
"A considerably drunk Mr. Rogers is slated to project real-time images of himself and another performer via a live video feed during the piece," a description says, "creating a violently noisy and chaotic sense of disorder".
Similar(59)
The last sentence of Douglas's most famous novel, "South Wind," gives you a sense of the delicious side of the author's hedonism: "For it was obvious to the meanest intelligence that Mr. Keith was considerably drunk".
Police Federation minutes noted that officers "got considerably drunk" that night while bereaved relatives were queueing outside to enter the hell of the gymnasium – where police would interrogate them about drinking.
He was a hitchhiker, a drunk, a violent criminal.
And this was a considerably larger room.
The fix avoids a considerably longer shutdown.
My sofa was a considerably cheaper place to live.
Mr. North is called a "sourpuss" by a drunk.
He said, "Well, one's a drunk.
A search for "drunk" yields a video of "Drunk Catholic Kids".
And let's be honest, a drunk is a drunk.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com