Sure. They're the ones under the lamp shades.
Seriously, Alcoholism has nothing to do with where or how you drink. When you need alcohol to function normally (or what sort of passes for normally) you're an alcoholic, regardless of the details. It's just another addiction to an especially harmful drug.
Alcoholic drinking is not social drinking.
yes
Ian Lendler has written: 'Alcoholica Esoterica' -- subject(s): Alcoholic beverages, Cooking & Food, Drinking customs, Drinking of alcoholic beverages, History, Humor (Nonfiction), Nonfiction, OverDrive, Social aspects, Social aspects of Alcoholic beverages
Robert Chapuis has written: 'L' alcool, un mode d'adaptation sociale?' -- subject(s): Drinking of alcoholic beverages, Social aspects, Social aspects of Drinking of alcoholic beverages
Sure, we call it a Canteen.
wiki never gives the answer
Stop drinking alcohol
Timo Kortteinen has written: 'Agricultural alcohol and social change in the Third World' -- subject- s -: Alcohol fuel industry, Alcohol industry, Alcoholic beverage industry, By-products, Social aspects, Social aspects of Alcoholic beverage industry 'Economic integration and the availability of alcoholic beverages in the European Community since 1975' -- subject- s -: Government policy, Wine industry
Prohibition, that great social experiment that backfired ,banned all alcoholic beverages.
Defecating on the sidewalk is commonly seen as a 'social bad thing'.
The word "alcoholic" does not have a prefix.You could add the prefix non- to it to make the word nonalcoholic.The word "alcoholic" does have a suffix; -ic is added to the end of the noun "alcohol" (a word for a thing) to form the noun "alcoholic", (a word for a person); and the adjective "alcoholic" to describe something as containing alcohol.
The term functional alcoholic is term that is based on alcohol dependence. It is a form of alcoholism where an individual is still able to maintain work and social life despite having an addiction to alcohol.