sometimes
YES! Once a scientist was doing research on backwash and how it tasted back washed in a drink and redrank his back wash.And as we all know every time you back wash it becomes more jellied, and of course he did not know this and he kept on backwashing and it became more jellyish and then the 13th time he did this it was so jellified it stuck in his throte and he ended up choking to death!
_________________ a change in the position or place of something over time in comparison to a reference point
Not every time you take a drink! You are supposed to rinse A LOT of times a day, but not every time you drink. If you smoke cigarettes, definitely rinse after those, and rinse after eating.
Drinking alcohol through a straw may slow down the rate at which you consume alcohol (depending on how you normally drink), but it will not change how the alcohol is processed in the body. As a result, drinking alcohol through a straw will not make a person any more or less drunk than drinking the alcohol regularly. (Assuming the amount of alcohol consumed is equal in both circumstances and the length of time in both circumstances is also equal.) The only time drinking alcohol through a straw would be faster than regular alcohol consumption is if you merely sip alcohol regularly. One can always chug a drink faster than one can sip it through a straw.Also, drinking anything through a straw will not mix the drink with air. The only time the liquid passing through a straw has air bubbles in it is when there is too little liquid in the container to adequately cover the end of the straw submerged in said liquid when suction occurs. Even if you do drink most of your drink and you intake the last little bit with some air bubbles, the alcohol will not mix with the air. And even if it did mix with the air, there's no reason why the air-alcohol mix would get anywhere near the nasal cavity. And there's no reason why the nasal cavity would absorb the alcohol any faster than your digestive tract.
No logic suggest that drinking through a straw will intoxicate you quicker. In fact, when drinking through a straw, we typically tend to take smaller sips of the liquid than we would if we just sipped it naturally.
Whenever it is in your fridge you should drink it. That's what it is for.
Actually, it's more common with root beer, but drinking ANY carbonated beverages is linked to non-ulcer related stomach pain. More so, it seems, when drinking them through a straw. The reason is that when you drink carbonated beverages without a straw a portion of the carbonation is eliminated, or neutralized, when it reacts to the saliva in your mouth. If you drink carbonated beverages through a straw, quickly, it fills your stomach with a lot of the gas caused when it reacts to the acid in your stomach, stretching the stomach lining and causing discomfort and pain. If you do drink carbonated beverages through a straw, drink them slowly and give your system time to adjust. You may find that your stomach is telling you to slow down, more often than you realize!
The fastest time to drink a pint of milkshake through a straw is 9.8 seconds by Osi Anyanwu.
Use a straw
You might have a gluten intolerance.
Probably the spoon left in it.
Stop drinking beer.