No. That is an old myth. There is no truth to it at all.
Yes, Drinking different types of alcohol does get you drunk faster because every alcoholic knows every drink holds a different amount of alcohol in it
Those with a higher alcohol content
The chemical compound called alcohol is what makes you drunk and dizzy. The alcohol is very quickly metabolized in your body (even faster than sugar).
The womans body absorbs alcohol faster. Women can drink less amounts of alcohol to get drunk the same way men do but they drink more.
The effervescence in any alcoholic beverage speeds the absorption of alcohol into the bloodstream.
No it does not. Alcohol as a maximum absorption rate, this can not be exceeded via drinking.
Yep. Eating slows down the absorption of alcohol into the body.
The carbonation helps the alcohol enter the body slightly faster, but it is the total amount of alcohol ingested that determines how drunk you get.
No. Carbonated drinks don't cause an effect of being drunk. The percentage of alcohol in the drink is what makes you drunk.
You get drunk based on the amount of alcohol that enters your body. Straws are usually served with sweet drinks which tend to be drunk faster than others, and which also often contain more liquor.
it will depend on the alcohol content compared to other drinks. the reason people tend to get drunk faster on sweet drinks such as alco-pops is that they are easy to drink so you drink more of it faster. So it's the amount you drink and speed you drink it that gets you drunk faster. But given a certain amount of alcohol ingested, if it is enough to make you drunk under ordinary circumstanaces, it will make you drunk - and deathly ill to boot - if it is heavily laced with sugar.Say that four straight glasses of white rum will make you reeling drunk. Four straight Bahama Mommas with the same amount of rum will make you reeling drunk and miserably sick , too.
Drinking any liquor with a carbonated beverage will get you drunk faster because the bloodstream absorbs the alcohol quicker with carbonation. I don't know about the "diet" part.