Are You Drunk Enough Quotes
Collection of top 27 famous quotes about Are You Drunk Enough
Are You Drunk Enough Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Are You Drunk Enough quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I don't think I've drunk enough beer to understand that.
— Terry Pratchett
As an actor, that's nerve-wracking enough [drunk and doing coke] because you have to do it at the right level.
— Ray Romano
Always hoping that, if I got drunk enough or stoned enough, I could numb that part of my soul that ached for Fliss as well.
— Sibylla Matilde
At four o'clock in the morning, when everyone is drunk enough, then extraordinary things can happen.
— James A. Baldwin
I'm an amiable drunk. Given enough time I always reach the point where every man is my brother.
— Mark Lawrence
I'm very nearly drunk enough to be transcendent.
— Maggie Stiefvater
I find that when the pain gets bad enough there are only three things to do - get drunk, kill yourself or laugh. I usually get drunk and laugh.
— Charles Bukowski
I incessantly look for water in wells dug by men, and I have drunk enough sand to prove it.
— Craig D. Lounsbrough
I'm just funnier when I'm drunk. Not falling-down drunk, just drunk enough to lose the self-doubt.
— Doug Stanhope
But Mr. Elton had only drunk wine enough to elevate his spirits, not at all to confuse his intellects.
— Jane Austen
Mon Dieu! why could they not always be little girls?
— Honore De Balzac
Fuck. I know we're both pretty liquored up but neither one of us is drunk enough for this conversation.
— Joanne McClean
I'd listen to the radio and look at the
walls and get drunk enough to
almost forget her
but then she would return once
again. — Charles Bukowski
walls and get drunk enough to
almost forget her
but then she would return once
again. — Charles Bukowski
Later tonight am going to tell you that I love you and maybe by that time you will be drunk enough to believe me.
— Tennessee Williams
Listen to life, it is the wisest teacher of all.
— Samuel Louis Gilmore
Five years is a good run for a sitcom; seven is good, but usually, it's a couple years of staying past your welcome.
— Mike Scully