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  2. Drinking culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_culture

    Drinking habits vary significantly across the globe with many countries have developed their own regional cultures based on unique traditions around the fermentation and consumption of alcohol as a social lubricant, which may also be known as a beer culture, wine culture etc. after a particularly prominent type of drink.

  3. File:Alcohol consumption per capita world map.PNG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Alcohol_consumption...

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  4. Epidemiology of binge drinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_binge_drinking

    The price of alcohol at supermarkets and liquor stores had also gone down, and the number of outlets had mushroomed as well. [42] Alcohol remains cheap, and sweet, spirit-based ready to drink beverages (similar to alcopops) remain popular among young people. [43] Drinking game "Edward Fortyhands", where bottles of beer are taped to participants ...

  5. Alcohol preferences in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_preferences_in_Europe

    Residents of Finland and Sweden consume twice as much beer as vodka (in terms of pure alcohol). [14] The Polish Beer-Lovers' Party (which won 16 seats in the Sejm in 1991) was founded on the notion of fighting alcoholism by a cultural abandonment of vodka for beer. And indeed in 1998, beer surpassed vodka as the most popular alcoholic drink in ...

  6. Beer Street and Gin Lane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_Street_and_Gin_Lane

    Beer Street and Gin Lane with their depictions of the deprivation of the wasted gin-drinkers and the corpulent good health of the beer-drinkers, owe a debt to Pieter Bruegel the Elder's La Maigre Cuisine and La Grasse Cuisine engraved by Pieter van der Heyden in 1563, which shows two meals, one of which overflows with food and is populated by ...

  7. Taverns in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taverns_in_North_America

    In 1770, per capita consumption was 3.7 gallons of distilled spirits per year, rising to 5.2 gallons in 1830 or approximately 1.8 one-ounce shots a day for every adult white man. [2] That total does not include the beer or hard cider, which colonists routinely drank in addition to rum, the most consumed distilled beverage available in British ...

  8. Consumption (sociology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumption_(sociology)

    The sociology of consumption is a field within sociology specifically about the social, economic, and cultural dimensions of consumer behavior. It studies how and why individuals and groups acquire and use goods and services in a given society, as well as the cultural meanings and social norms associated with these practices.

  9. Potomania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potomania

    Potomania (From Greek pōtō "drink (liquor)" + mania) is a specific hypo-osmolality syndrome related to massive consumption of beer, which is poor in solutes and electrolytes.