skinful
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]skinful (plural skinfuls or skinsful)
- Enough to fill a skin.
- a skinful of wine
- (colloquial) Enough alcoholic drink to cause inebriation.
- I wasn't thinking straight – I'd had a skinful that night.
- 1773, Oliver Goldsmith, She Stoops to Conquer:
- When methodist preachers come down,
A-preaching that drinking is sinful,
I'll wager the rascals a crown,
They always preach best with a skinful.
- 2024 August 7, Paul Clifton, “You absolute moron!”, in RAIL, number 1015, page 54:
- "People who've had a skinful," Robey explains. "They lose their inhibitions and forget the boundaries of acceptable behaviour.
- (slang) Plenty; a large amount.
- 1959, Frank Clune, Murders on Maunga-tapu, page 10:
- To steal a housewife's purse might mean that her children would have to go hungry; but what of that, if the flash young “dip” could gain admiration from his mates by boasting that he had “frisked a judy's cly and lifted a skinful of bunce”?
- 2011, Anne Emery, Death at Christy Burke's, page 102:
- “Now there's a skinful of abuse!” the curly top exclaimed. “Sounds as if she crossed the ocean just to denounce you in a public place.”
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- en:Drinking