intoxicatedlike
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English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]intoxicatedlike (comparative more intoxicatedlike, superlative most intoxicatedlike)
- (rare) Alternative form of intoxicated-like
- 1974 December, D.R. Thorne, A. Findling, A.J. Bachrach, “Muscle tremors under helium, neon, nitrogen, and nitrous oxide at 1 to 37 atm.”, in Journal of applied Physiology, volume 37, number 6:
- Nitrogen may be used as the diluant for dives to a few hundred feet, but thereafter it leads to the intoxicatedlike state called 'nitrogen narcosis.”
- 1980, Albert Hofmann, LSD, my problem child, page 15:
- At home I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant intoxicatedlike condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination.
- 1993, Keith S. Dobson, Philip C. Kendall, Psychopathology and Cognition[1], →ISBN, page 281:
- The first of these studies (Henderson and Goldman, 1987) used a limited expectancy challenge procedure that consisted primarily of administration of a placebo alcohol beverage and subsequent disclosure of the placebo nature of this beverage after subjects had engaged in intoxicatedlike behavior.