yes it does
Wiki User
∙ 2011-05-23 07:54:12No not at all true it matters about the amount of alcohol you drink.
No. The body absorbs alcohol at the same rate, regardless of how it gets in the mouth.
No logic suggest that drinking through a straw will intoxicate you quicker. In fact, when drinking through a straw, we typically tend to take smaller sips of the liquid than we would if we just sipped it naturally.
In a well mixed drink it doesn't, but alcohol settles to the bottom of most drinks rather quickly, so the straw will make you drink the concentrated alcohol at the bottom of the drink
Drinking alcohol through a straw may slow down the rate at which you consume alcohol (depending on how you normally drink), but it will not change how the alcohol is processed in the body. As a result, drinking alcohol through a straw will not make a person any more or less drunk than drinking the alcohol regularly. (Assuming the amount of alcohol consumed is equal in both circumstances and the length of time in both circumstances is also equal.) The only time drinking alcohol through a straw would be faster than regular alcohol consumption is if you merely sip alcohol regularly. One can always chug a drink faster than one can sip it through a straw.Also, drinking anything through a straw will not mix the drink with air. The only time the liquid passing through a straw has air bubbles in it is when there is too little liquid in the container to adequately cover the end of the straw submerged in said liquid when suction occurs. Even if you do drink most of your drink and you intake the last little bit with some air bubbles, the alcohol will not mix with the air. And even if it did mix with the air, there's no reason why the air-alcohol mix would get anywhere near the nasal cavity. And there's no reason why the nasal cavity would absorb the alcohol any faster than your digestive tract.
No not at all true it matters about the amount of alcohol you drink.
yes, we get drunk faster with straw. usually with straw we drink faster, so we ingest more alcohol in shorter period.
No. The body absorbs alcohol at the same rate, regardless of how it gets in the mouth.
No logic suggest that drinking through a straw will intoxicate you quicker. In fact, when drinking through a straw, we typically tend to take smaller sips of the liquid than we would if we just sipped it naturally.
In a well mixed drink it doesn't, but alcohol settles to the bottom of most drinks rather quickly, so the straw will make you drink the concentrated alcohol at the bottom of the drink
You get drunk based on the amount of alcohol that enters your body. Straws are usually served with sweet drinks which tend to be drunk faster than others, and which also often contain more liquor.
Its faster
Drinking alcohol through a straw may slow down the rate at which you consume alcohol (depending on how you normally drink), but it will not change how the alcohol is processed in the body. As a result, drinking alcohol through a straw will not make a person any more or less drunk than drinking the alcohol regularly. (Assuming the amount of alcohol consumed is equal in both circumstances and the length of time in both circumstances is also equal.) The only time drinking alcohol through a straw would be faster than regular alcohol consumption is if you merely sip alcohol regularly. One can always chug a drink faster than one can sip it through a straw.Also, drinking anything through a straw will not mix the drink with air. The only time the liquid passing through a straw has air bubbles in it is when there is too little liquid in the container to adequately cover the end of the straw submerged in said liquid when suction occurs. Even if you do drink most of your drink and you intake the last little bit with some air bubbles, the alcohol will not mix with the air. And even if it did mix with the air, there's no reason why the air-alcohol mix would get anywhere near the nasal cavity. And there's no reason why the nasal cavity would absorb the alcohol any faster than your digestive tract.
The drinking implement is not important. The speed at which you drink is. If you drink more in a shorter space of time then yes, naturally. Pretty self explanatory really.
No. Only if you choose to consume more alcohol when you do so.
No. Alcohol does not care the method by which it is imbibed. It is not concentrated by drinking through straws. Assuming the same amount of alcohol is imbibed in the same amount of time through a straw as through regular drinking methods, the alcohol will not affect you differently in any way. Any difference in experience or in the degree to which one is drunk is purely psychological.
Not if you consume the same quantity of alcohol in the same amount of time.