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"feel tipsy" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It describes the feeling of being slightly drunk or lightheaded. This phrase can be used to describe one's own state or someone else's. Example: "After drinking two glasses of wine, I started to feel tipsy and decided it was time to stop."
Exact(6)
"Even stone cold sober, one look is enough to make you feel tipsy".
Unless you have the constitution of a rhinoceros, you can probably notice how alcoholic strength affects the rate at which you begin to feel tipsy when drinking.
Craig writes with charm and wit, and what in other hands might feel tipsy and overblown remains in the region of delight.
Elephants — with huge noses and more olfactory receptor genes than any other known animal on Earth — gobble up the fallen fruits (they may make them feel tipsy too).
Regular drinkers of ethanol--the type of alcohol found in frosty malted beverages--eventually require more and more drinks to feel tipsy.
By the time you have consumed enough of these to feel tipsy, you have also consumed two or three times more cola than alcohol.
Similar(54)
Bill: I wanted to be a man so I had a drink but I must have had two sips before I felt tipsy.
Many of the 500 people who attended a party on Tuesday celebrating the first issue of Absolute, a lifestyle magazine for Manhattan elites, felt tipsy.
She told police: "I felt tipsy but not out of control.
"Feeling tipsy?" quipped one of my in-the-know co-workers.
She wasn't sure, but she said she felt tipsy, commenting, "It's just way too intimate".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com