Is it the informal use? Many dictionaries don't contain that defenition.
It's informal- there's a Jack Lemmon film where he's busy typing and says
Cigarette me as a way of asking someone to stick a lit cigarette in his mouth. I don't know if the usage is widespread enough to attract the attention of dictionary makers, but if you're standing at a bar and a friend says it, the meaning's clear. I haven't heard
get beered like that, but I have heard
we were beered up, meaning drunk, so
get beered up could work. Again, it a slang usage and not something very common, in BrE at least.
The Jacl Lemmon line was in a 1974 film, so it's nothing new:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Front_Page_(1974_film)