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catch a buzz
verb
To become slightly inebriated, but not yet be drunk.
Exact(3)
You can hang out there, reset, catch a buzz.
Maybe you'd like to skip out on that boring lecture and hit the beach, work on that tan, catch a buzz -- and maybe get a little loving.
If you're in the minority of teenagers without access to pot, you're liable to do some pretty stupid shit to catch a buzz.
Similar(57)
When Mr. Emmich graduated from Rutgers with a liberal arts degree in 2001, he was still writing songs as feverishly as he did when he was a 15-year-old, when he first "caught a buzz" off the process, he said.
See "Catching a Buzz".
The New York-based firm's results caught a buzz from capital markets, despite a fixed income hangover.
I caught a buzz off half of a Coors Light and thought, "I'm moving to Denver".
I'm still not sure I ever caught a buzz off the nicotine, but I certainly got high on the kinship.
Side two of the LP was recorded with The Muffins at Catch-a-Buzz Studio in Rockville, Maryland, United States in November 1979, with additional recording at Sunrise Studios in Switzerland in January 1980.
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Jordan was a thrill to watch his individual transcendence was so profound that we could catch a contact buzz off it even through the television, or a 39-second YouTube video, or a freaking.gif.
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