To drink the health of (gcide) | Drink \Drink\, v. t.
    1. To swallow (a liquid); to receive, as a fluid, into the
       stomach; to imbibe; as, to drink milk or water.
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             There lies she with the blessed gods in bliss,
             There drinks the nectar with ambrosia mixed.
                                                   --Spenser.
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             The bowl of punch which was brewed and drunk in Mrs.
             Betty's room.                         --Thackeray.
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    2. To take in (a liquid), in any manner; to suck up; to
       absorb; to imbibe.
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             And let the purple violets drink the stream.
                                                   --Dryden.
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    3. To take in; to receive within one, through the senses; to
       inhale; to hear; to see.
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             To drink the cooler air,              --Tennyson.
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             My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words
             Of that tongue's utterance.           --Shak.
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             Let me . . . drink delicious poison from thy eye.
                                                   --Pope.
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    4. To smoke, as tobacco. [Obs.]
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             And some men now live ninety years and past,
             Who never drank to tobacco first nor last. --Taylor
                                                   (1630.)
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    To drink down, to act on by drinking; to reduce or subdue;
       as, to drink down unkindness. --Shak.
 
    To drink in, to take into one's self by drinking, or as by
       drinking; to receive and appropriate as in satisfaction of
       thirst. "Song was the form of literature which he [Burns]
       had drunk in from his cradle." --J. C. Shairp.
 
    To drink off or To drink up, to drink completely,
       especially at one draught; as, to drink off a cup of
       cordial.
 
    To drink the health of, or To drink to the health of, to
       drink while expressing good wishes for the health or
       welfare of.
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