One who is omnibibulous is likely to drink anything (spirits). An existing coined word related to the word "imbibe." Attributed to H.L. Mencken, who used an alternative spelling: "ombibulous."
The first example was submitted by Marvin Scott and comes from Wm. Manchester's biography of Winston Churchill, The Last Lion, page 886 in the Laurel Trade Paperback Edition, 1983.
Примеры использования:
"Sir William Hawthorne, Master of Churchill College, Cambridge, expected me to be both omnivorous and omnibibulous; when we rose from his high table and left the room I felt sheathed in an alcoholic mist."
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