La langue française

Accueil > Dictionnaire > Définitions du mot « drinker »

Drinker

[drɛ̃ke]
Ecouter

Définitions de « drinker »

Drinker - Verbe

  • (Argot) Consommer une boisson dans un contexte festif ou social.

    Drinkons moult apéros, renforcés par Dédé auquel je remets Psûké pour qu'il l'illustre.
    — René Fallet, Carnets de jeunesse: 9 août 1947-2 août 1948

Étymologie de « drinker »

Peut-être par un croisement entre le français trinquer et l'anglais drink.

Usage du mot « drinker »

Évolution historique de l’usage du mot « drinker » depuis 1800

Fréquence d'apparition du mot « drinker » dans le journal Le Monde depuis 1945

Source : Gallicagram. Créé par Benjamin Azoulay et Benoît de Courson, Gallicagram représente graphiquement l’évolution au cours du temps de la fréquence d’apparition d’un ou plusieurs syntagmes dans les corpus numérisés de Gallica et de beaucoup d’autres bibliothèques.

Citations contenant le mot « drinker »

  • A casual or fanatic tea drinker might enjoy learning more about the world of tea from this well-designed and informative volume (with drawings from NYT best-selling illustrator Wendy MacNaughton). It gives historical tidbits and fun facts about different types, plus helpful brewing tips and recipes so they can better enjoy the tea-drinking experience.
    The Strategist — 47 Best Gifts for Tea Lovers | The Strategist
  • The faster you realise this, the better. “My ex was a heavy drinker and I split with him partly due to this,” says Yaz*, 56. “He had the characteristics of an alcoholic: lies, selling valuable items when I went travelling for 18 months. I googled him recently and saw that he had lost his job due to spending £300 each week on alcohol and stealing from his clients. I was not surprised, and saddened, of course, as he suffered a stroke due to this stress. I had a lucky escape.”
    The Independent — Can a drinker date a non-drinker? | The Independent
  • Zero! Boring! Almost as boring as being asked, every time you decline a drink: why? If there’s one person more boring than a drinker, it’s the drinker who asks why you’re not drinking. Actually, there’s someone even more boring: the non-drinker answering that question. I can’t say I’m pregnant, nor that I’ve fallen off a planter box once too often. I have no excuses, other than heart and brain health. By that stage of the explanation, the previously inquisitive drinker has drifted away for a refill.
    The Sydney Morning Herald — Drinking culture: There’s only one thing more boring than a heavy drinker
  • Tight, taut severity won’t please the drinker if its grip on the wine never eases, so a partial exploration of the technique seems the wisest course at this stage. That’s what has happened among Chardonnay-makers in Australia over the last decade. Back in 2015, about 65% of Margaret River Chardonnay saw no malo at all; now, many growers are opting for at least some malo, with the attendant benefits for texture and complexity, despite a warming climate.
    Decanter — Andrew Jefford: ‘Tight, taut severity won’t please the drinker if its grip on the wine never eases’ - Decanter
  • That inner drive which has made Thompson such a distinctive player also exerted an altogether darker force upon his life. “I would drink any amount of booze or take any drug you put in front of me,” he admits. When I drank, I was going to be the best drinker in the bar, or take the most drugs or whatever. When I did give up the drink I was going to be the best at that.”
    louder — “When I drank, I was going to be the best drinker in the bar, or take the most drugs or whatever. When I did give up the drink I was going to be the best at that:” The bottom-end drive that made Danny Thompson’s name | Louder

Traductions du mot « drinker »

Langue Traduction
Anglais drinker
Espagnol bebedor
Italien bevitore
Allemand trinker
Chinois 饮酒者
Arabe شارب
Portugais bebedor
Russe пьяница
Japonais 酒飲み
Basque edale
Corse bevitore
Source : Google Translate API


Sources et ressources complémentaires

SOMMAIRE

Source : Google Books Ngram Viewer, application linguistique permettant d’observer l’évolution au fil du temps du nombre d'occurrences d’un ou de plusieurs mots dans les textes publiés.