1. carouse - Noun
2. carouse - Verb
A drinking match; a carousal.
To drink deeply or freely in compliment; to take part in a carousal; to engage in drunken revels.
To drink up; to drain; to drink freely or jovially.
Source: Webster's dictionaryYou know, my friends, with what a brave carouse I made a Second Marriage in my house; favored old barren reason from my bed, and took the daughter of the vine to spouse. Omar Khayyám
A dead shepherd brought tremendous chords from hellAnd bad the sheep carouse. Or so they said. Children in love with them brought early flowers And scattered them about, no two alike. Wallace Stevens
I'm not a party guy. I don't carouse very much. Garry Shandling
They were out carousing last night Source: Internet
In normal life, I carouse away quite confidently to pretty much every Ibiza house classic known to man, yet in this room I could just as well be Morris Dancing. Source: Internet
There, every January, hundreds of participants from wine Confréries and local Brotherhoods, attired in their finery, gather in colourful processions to celebrate, carouse and laud their saint with more images and statues than in all Portugal. Source: Internet