Synonyms: drinker, toper [literary], drunk, soak [slang] More Synonyms of boozer
More Synonyms of boozer
boozer in British English
(ˈbuːzə)
noun informal
1.
a person who is fond of drinking
2. British, Australian and New Zealand
a bar or pub
boozer in American English
(ˈbuzər)
noun Slang
1.
a person who drinks alcoholic liquor to excess; drunk
2. British
a pub; tavern
Examples of 'boozer' in a sentence
boozer
But the reality is a lot of big boozers may be dependent without realising it.
The Sun (2010)
British boozers are dying and something radical has to be done.
The Sun (2009)
They showed almost five local boozers a day ended up in hospital.
The Sun (2015)
The mood in my local boozer was incredulous.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
Is your local boozer in danger of going under?
The Sun (2009)
Buy her a pint if she winds up in your local boozer.
The Sun (2011)
Time is also being called on the British boozer.
The Sun (2016)
It comes amid fears soaring rents and beer tax hikes could kill off the great British boozer.
The Sun (2013)
And this is your local boozer, right?
The Sun (2011)
He should go further and drop the tax on all beer and wine sold in pubs to help save the British boozer.
The Sun (2009)
This is a proper old boisterous boozer that just happens to serve fabulous food, and has been doing so for the past ten years.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
That has slowed, but beer campaigners still worry about the British boozer.
The Sun (2015)
Of course it was a beautiful British motor for a beautiful British boozer.
The Sun (2010)
It looks how a nice old boozer should look: wood tables, beams and hops hanging above the bar.
Times, Sunday Times (2015)
Not sleazy old boozers with carpets last cleaned in 1986, but joints where the hip and wannabe hip wanna be seen.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
But they would visit more if boozers served good food, had better seats, entertainment and showed less sport on the telly.
The Sun (2010)
WOMEN aged over 65 are the biggest boozers before boarding holiday flights, a survey found.
The Sun (2015)
Further evidence of the gentrification of southeast London comes in the form of yet another gastropub moving in on territory once occupied by an old-fashioned boozer.
Times, Sunday Times (2007)
1 (noun)
Definition
a bar or pub
I just popped into the boozer for a drink.
Synonyms
pub
He was in the pub until closing time.
local (British, informal)
The Black Horse is my local.
bar (informal, mainly British)
the city's most popular country and western bar
inn
the Waterside inn
tavern
The tavern was packed with about 120 drinkers.
beer parlour (Canadian)
beverage room (Canadian)
public house
watering hole (facetious, slang)
roadhouse
hostelry
alehouse (archaic)
taproom
2 (noun)
Definition
a person who is fond of drinking
We always thought he was a bit of a boozer.
Synonyms
drinker
I'm not a heavy drinker.
toper (literary)
drunk
A drunk lay in the alley.
soak (slang)
alcoholic
He admitted publicly that he was an alcoholic.
lush (slang)
drunkard
Although he liked a drink, he was never a drunkard.
sot
tippler
wino (informal)
alko or alco (Australian, slang)
inebriate
an inebriate wandering the streets late at night
Additional synonyms
in the sense of alcoholic
Definition
a person who is addicted to alcohol
He admitted publicly that he was an alcoholic.
Synonyms
drinker,
hard drinker,
drunkard,
drunk,
dipsomaniac,
inebriate,
sot,
carouser,
tippler,
boozer (informal),
soak (slang),
lush (slang),
sponge (informal),
wino (informal),
alky (slang),
alko or alco (Australian, slang),
toper (literary)
in the sense of bar
Definition
a counter or room where alcoholic drinks are served
the city's most popular country and western bar
Synonyms
public house,
pub (informal, British),
counter,
inn,
local (British, informal),
lounge,
saloon,
tavern,
canteen,
watering hole (facetious, slang),
boozer (British, Australian, New Zealand, informal),
beer parlour (Canadian),
roadhouse,
hostelry (archaic, facetious),
alehouse (archaic),
taproom
in the sense of drunk
Definition
a person who is drunk or drinks habitually to excess