Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Before the bottle was completely empty, he fell into a drunken stupor.
Lying on the grass, he had fallen into a drunken stupor.
Col. Cramer drank heavily and fell into a drunken stupor.
She narrowly survived only because he soon fell into a drunken stupor and she was able to make her escape.
At a press conference, Kenney verbally abused reporters and then fell into a drunken stupor.
Rocky and Leo continue to drink; at one point, Leo falls into a drunken stupor.
Without a word the ugly monstrosity drank the whole goatskin and became very drunk within a very short time and fell into a drunken stupor.
Caresse spent some of her time while her husband, Bert Young, fell into a drunken stupor every night churning out another 200 pages of pornography.
Halfway through dinner on the night I visited, Houellebecq fell into a drunken stupor, his nodding head eventually landing on his plate next to a smear of mayonnaise.
Thinking that Tramell received the confidential information from an adversarial Internal Affairs investigator, Marty Nilsen, a violent Curran gets himself suspended and falls into a drunken stupor.
According to one version after falling into a drunken stupor he had been eaten by a herd of swine, and this was ascribed as the reason why Muslims proscribed consumption of alcohol and pork.
Their shop which is almost perpetually empty of produce, especially the front window, has been vandalised many times, and has burnt down several times, generally due to them leaving the oven on and falling into a drunken stupor.
John Chrysostom, a church father, writes that Noah's behaviour is defensible: as the first human to taste wine, he would not know its aftereffects: "Through ignorance and inexperience of the proper amount to drink, fell into a drunken stupor".
As the night continued, King Rothgar and his Queen departed for sleep, and the massive doors of Hurot Hall were locked and barred, and the nobles and earls remaining there fell into a drunken stupor and snored loudly.
In the prologue to "The Taming of the Shrew," Sly is a comic throwaway, a wastrel who falls into a drunken stupor and into a practical joke, when a nobleman conspires to treat him, on his awakening, as a nobleman himself, emerged from a long bout of insanity.