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The phrase "as booze" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in informal contexts to compare something to alcohol or to refer to alcohol in a casual manner.
Example: "He enjoys his coffee as booze, needing it to get through the long workday."
Alternatives: "like alcohol" or "as liquor".
Exact(19)
They should redirect their efforts to making it as well-regulated as booze and cigarettes.
Auto saves same end as booze and it probably costs more.
In sports-page jargon, "distractions" has long been a euphemism for the temptations, such as booze, drugs, and women, that can sap professional athletes of their powers.
The whole place reflects their personal mission to create a thinking, drinking space, lectures and exhibitions being as important to the set up as booze.
But he was a writer who needed recognition and money as much as booze, and if "Gatsby" had sold well it would likely have saved him from the lacerating public confessions of failure that he made in the nineteen-thirties, or, at least, would have kept him away from Hollywood.
His first piece, "Sex and Death to the Age 14," told the story of just that, setting an autobiographical tone that continued throughout his career, including such self-explanatory titles as "Booze, Cars and College Girls," and "India (and After)," the story of a Performance Group tour to India.
Similar(39)
In each instance they paid the bootlegger $500 in cash as advance payment for delivery of as much booze as he could supply them and left him holding the bag for the balance.
In late November, I joined the locals in quaffing a borovicka, a potent juniper-flavored liqueur served in traditional long-necked, pot-bellied shot glasses that seem designed to get as much booze into your system as quickly as possible.
I resolved to get my life in order, quit being a waster, do something with my time instead of (or at least as well as) boozing and fornicating it away.
Initially considered vulgar and mostly banned from the radio, guitar-driven bachata focused on "amargue" or bitterness, as well as boozing, double-entendres and general bad-boy behavior.
Some clubs are determined to stick to what they know best - providing as much booze as a man can feasibly drink at the lowest posible cost - and some prejudices seem entrenched.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com