Blogs

  • News
  • |
  • Art
  • |
  • History
  • |
  • Food and Travel
  • |
  • Science
Dinosaur Tracking

Where paleontology meets pop culture

Hominid Hunting

Meet the members of the tangled human family tree

Innovations

How human ingenuity is changing the way we live

Surprising Science

Ideas, news and discoveries from the world of science


December 16, 2008

The Language of Drunkenness

A beer tasting, courtesy of Flickr user Ben Harris-Roxas

A beer tasting, courtesy of Flickr user Ben Harris-Roxas

How often do you get drunk? Intoxicated? Inebriated? Tanked? Hammered? Wasted? Plastered? Sloshed? Tipsy? Buzzed?

Does your answer change depending on the word I use? And if I asked you to define each term, would your definitions be the same as mine?

In daily life, these nuances of language don’t really matter, but researchers who study self-reported intoxication may have a problem. These are people who ask questions like “How often in the past 30 days did you drink enough to get ‘drunk’?” and expect their study subjects’ answers to mean something reliable.

A University of Missouri graduate student, Ash Levitt, conducted two surveys of university undergraduates and demonstrated the language conundrum (his results appear in the Early View section of the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research). He asked participants about their use of various words related to intoxication.

The students defined “drunk” as being somewhere in the moderate to heavy range of inebriation. Among women, “tipsy” meant consuming about four drinks over two hours, which is binge-drinking level, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism National Advisory Council. The guys were more straightforward in their language; higher levels of drinking among them were more often called “hammered” or “wasted.”

Of course, we are talking about college students. I wonder if you would get similar results if you did the same surveys among older adults, or if one day adults simply get less creative with intoxication-related language and just admit they got drunk?



***

Sign up for our free email newsletter and receive the best stories from Smithsonian.com each week.

4 Comments »

  1. gjd says:

    4 drinks in two hours is “binge drinking?” jeez, I need to start going to meetings.

  2. Sarah Zielinski says:

    It’s 4 drinks in two hours for women. Guys don’t get labeled binge drinkers til they hit 5 drinks over the same time.

  3. Sandy Lee says:

    I’ve been put under the table by kittens in my lifetime. For me, binge drinking is reading the label on the bottle. Perhaps I’m constantly drunk, because I still can’t do the arithmetic problems posed by Yahoo Mail.

  4. gjd says:

    In Australia, 5 drinks in two hours is called “Breakfast”

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

Advertisement



Follow Us



Travel with Smithsonian






Advertisement