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.
yes, we get drunk faster with straw. usually with straw we drink faster, so we ingest more alcohol in shorter period.
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 it doesn't drinking it is exactly the same
No 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.
yes it does
no
when you drink through a straw you remove some of the air in the straw. Because there is less air pressure of the straw is reduced. But the atmospheric pressure on the surface of the liquid.
We are not sure if you are asking how you can stop drinking, or how you can stop someone else's drinking. If it is the latter, you can't.
It is simply creating a low pressure
I personally think you drink more when using a straw. I drink twice as much with a straw than tipping the cup.
The body part that best helps to suck up juice from a drinking straw is the tongue. When a person sucks liquid through a straw, the jaw muscles and tongue work in conjunction to bring the liquid up.
The drinking straw as we know it today was invented in 1888 by Marvin Stone.
No, not a drinking straw. As for straw as in grass, I guess someone could eat that.
The modern drinking straw was patented on 3 December 1888 by Marvin Chester Stone.
Historians have four that the earliest drinking straw was made by Sumerians for drinking beer. It was used to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation.
This is significant as the drink moves up the straw and into your mouth.
"Muscular action reduces air pressure in the mouth, whereupon atmospheric pressure forces the drink up the straw." ~ Wikipedia