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The phrase "drinking hard" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone who drinks excessively or frequently. For example: "John was known for his partying ways and drinking hard every weekend."
Exact(37)
(Is pregnant Tori drinking? Hard to tell).
They were good at both thinking hard and drinking hard!
So you're drinking hard to cope with that.
Pacino was smoking at nine, chewing tobacco at ten, and drinking hard liquor at thirteen.
Wink carries a bottle around; he's drinking hard, fighting against illness, hating the inevitable end.
"I got used to drinking hard liquor during Prohibition," he says.
Similar(23)
Kathleen Turner talks to Andrew Marr about her return to the London stage as a hard-drinking, hard up woman in 'Bakersfield Mist'.
"It puts pressure on men to be of a particular mould, pressure on boys to harden up to become these tough beer-drinking hard men.
As any student knows, 19th century New York was one hard-drinking, hard living place to be.
They were hard-drinking, hard-living characters one and all.
He was that typical hard-drinking, hard-living policeman.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com