What is another word for quaffs?

Pronunciation: [kwˈɒfs] (IPA)

Quaffs, which refers to consuming a beverage in large gulps or in a hearty manner, has several synonyms that can be used interchangeably. Some of the synonyms for quaffs include chugs, gulps, guzzles, swigs, slurps, and drinks. Other similar words include sips, imbibe, and consume. These words are often used to describe the act of enjoying a refreshing beverage or to describe someone who is indulging in a drink to their heart's content. Whatever the word used, the meaning remains the same: to enjoy a drink in a satisfying and satisfying manner.

What are the hypernyms for Quaffs?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Quaffs

The little company which at the beginning of this simple story we found assembled at Erlach Court is now dispersed to all quarters of the world: the general is 'grazing,' as Jack Leskjewitsch expresses it, with somebody in Southern Hungary; Stasy is fluttering, with sweet smiles and covert malice, from friend to friend, seeming at present on the lookout for a fixed engagement for the winter; Rohritz is off on his wonted autumnal hunting-expedition, and more than usually bored by it; and the Leskjewitsches are still at Erlach Court, where Freddy is in perpetual conflict with his new tutor, a spare, lank philosopher lately imported for him from Bohemia, and Katrine quaffs full draughts of her beloved solitude, without experiencing the great degree of rapture she had anticipated from it; there is a cloud upon her brow, and her annoyance is principally due to the fact that the captain begins to show unmistakable signs of a lapse from his former manly energy of character; he scarcely holds himself as erect as was his wont, and the only occupation which he pursues with any notable degree of self-sacrifice and devotion is the breaking of a pair of very young and very fiery horses.
"Erlach Court"
Ossip Schubin
He quaffs great goblets of wine.
"The Complete Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow"
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The adjutant, acting as Ganymede, pours out the liquor and hands the cup to his colonel, which the latter quaffs off.
"The Lone Ranche"
Captain Mayne Reid

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