To be intoxicated means your brain and body are temporarily impaired by a substance like alcohol or drugs, so your thinking, coordination, and self- control are noticeably reduced.

What “intoxicated” means

In everyday language, being intoxicated usually means being drunk from alcohol or high from another mind‑altering substance.

More formally, it means a substance has affected your nervous system enough that your physical and mental control are clearly diminished.

Key points:

  • A substance (alcohol, drugs, some medicines, inhalants, etc.) changes how your brain works.
  • Effects are temporary , though they can still be dangerous.
  • At higher levels, intoxication can become an emergency (alcohol poisoning, overdose, accidents).

Common signs of intoxication

Signs vary with the substance and the amount, but typical alcohol‑type intoxication looks like:

  • Slurred or slowed speech.
  • Poor coordination (stumbling, dropping things, trouble walking).
  • Slowed reaction time and bad judgment (risky choices, arguments, unsafe driving).
  • Mood changes (overly happy, aggressive, tearful, uninhibited).
  • Impaired thinking (confusion, trouble focusing, disorientation).
  • Nausea, vomiting, or extreme drowsiness at higher levels.

For alcohol specifically, intoxication is often linked to a measurable blood alcohol concentration (BAC); many laws treat someone as legally intoxicated for driving around 0.08% BAC, because control is significantly reduced by then.

Different senses of “intoxicated”

The word has a few related meanings:

  1. Substance-related (main one)
    • Affected by alcohol or drugs to the point of noticeably reduced control; often described simply as “drunk.”
  1. Emotional or metaphorical
    • Sometimes people say they are “intoxicated by” love, power, success, or a place, meaning they feel extremely excited or carried away by it, not that they literally took a substance.
  1. Historical / literal “poisoned”
    • The word comes from a Latin root meaning “to poison,” and in older or technical usage intoxication can mean being poisoned by a substance.

Why intoxication matters (health & safety)

Being intoxicated can seem casual or social, but it has real risks:

  • Accidents and injuries: Impaired coordination and judgment increase the chances of falls, fights, and car crashes.
  • Medical danger: Very high levels can suppress breathing, cause coma, or be fatal (alcohol poisoning, overdose).
  • Legal issues: Many laws define intoxication levels for driving or operating machinery and punish behavior done while intoxicated (like DUI).

If someone is:

  • Difficult to wake, breathing slowly or irregularly,
  • Has blue or very pale skin, or
  • Can’t stop vomiting or seems confused or unresponsive,

that can be a medical emergency, and urgent help is needed.

Quick FAQ style recap

  • What does it mean to be intoxicated?
    Your brain and body are temporarily impaired by alcohol or another substance, so your control, thinking, and coordination are clearly affected.
  • Is intoxication always from alcohol?
    No. Any mind‑altering substance (some drugs, medications, inhalants) can cause intoxication.
  • Does intoxicated always mean “drunk”?
    In casual use, often yes; more broadly, it includes drug effects and even intense emotional excitement (“intoxicated by love”) in a metaphorical sense.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.