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bacchanal
[bah-kuh-nahl, bak-uh-nal, bak-uh-nl, bak-uh-nl]
noun
a follower of Bacchus.
a drunken reveler.
an occasion of drunken revelry; orgy; bacchanalia.
adjective
pertaining to Bacchus; bacchanalian.
bacchanal
/ ˈbækənəl /
noun
a follower of Bacchus
a drunken and riotous celebration
a participant in such a celebration; reveller
adjective
of or relating to Bacchus
Word History and Origins
Origin of bacchanal1
Word History and Origins
Origin of bacchanal1
Example Sentences
Their rollicking redo, set from dusk to hangover at a drunken bacchanal, is vibrant and viciously alive.
There were stories of wild bacchanals involving nudists, and grand parties attended by the likes of artist Andy Warhol, jazz musician Charlie Parker and Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman.
As I write this essay, the mainstream news media has already, for the most part, moved on from Trump’s fantasy and threats of a bacchanal of violence.
But, in a stroke of political savvy, Harrison leaned into the image, campaigning from town to town in a kind of roving bacchanal.
In December, cringing apologies were extracted from Russian celebrities who attended an “almost naked” bacchanal deemed unseemly during wartime.
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