imbibing 的 2 个定义
im·bibed, im·bib·ing.
- to consume by drinking; drink: He imbibed great quantities of iced tea.
 - to absorb or soak up, as water, light, or heat: Plants imbibe moisture from the soil.
 - to take or receive into the mind, as knowledge, ideas, or the like: to imbibe a sermon; to imbibe beautiful scenery.
 
im·bibed, im·bib·ing.
- to drink, especially alcoholic beverages: Just a soft drink for me—I don't imbibe.
 - to absorb liquid or moisture.
 - Archaic. to soak or saturate; imbue.
 
imbibing 近义词
drink, often heavily
更多imbibing例句
- One of the main consequences of imbibing alcohol is dehydration—your liver uses a lot of the water in your body to process and break down alcohol, so all other organs, including your skin, lose out.
 - The show also offers the specter of stars imbibing at dinner tables, a good fit for a viral age.
 - Some are trying to combat concerns of customers unwittingly imbibing too much with chemometrics — science-based lab reporting that serves like nutritional facts for weed.
 - When it was time to step into Holiday’s shoes she researched thoroughly and even went as far as attempting to transform herself into the singer by imbibing and chain smoking.
 - Stories are powerful because they are vehicles for imbibing moral worldviews.
 - OK, so he used to imbibe to excess, but he no longer partakes.
 - At the very least, they establish a tone and mindset that rank-and-file liberals imbibe and accept.
 - Single or spoken for, everyone has reason enough to imbibe on the most loved/hated holiday around.
 - Anneli Rufus on 15 stats that predict your propensity to imbibe.
 - Sutherland is perhaps the most righteous in his intoxication of all the celebrities known to conspicuously imbibe.
 - Nothing was more natural than that two such women should imbibe the deepest tenderness for each other.
 - The peasants imbibe a little noisy merriment at the tavern, but their helpmates always have grave, stern countenances.
 - M. de Voltaire, say they, never could imbibe these Sentiments in France.
 - It may be truly said, with regard to those who imbibe the spirit of their Master, "no man liveth to himself."
 - Animal miasmata, like all other poison, become more active in proportion to the quantity which we imbibe.