Joko , I wasn't having a pop at you - merely stating a difference of opinion to yours and concuring with the Scottish sector on here. I was of course referring to your "from these 2 places you are just buying beer ! " statement , which was just tongue in cheek because I got your obvious meaning. Perhaps a 'lol' was in order to save confusion. If you are not happy with the opinions of 3-4 people on an internet forum , then by all means , please do take a trip to Scotland and conduct a survey to get the general consensus - the results may surprise you :-)
The meaning has never changed for me because for me it has always just been that way. There is no definitive right or wrong answer here , which is the point I am generally making and I was commenting in relation to the comments between you and Legend where you were both claiming that the other is wrong. So to reiterate my points , there is no definitive right or wrong answer - it means different things to different people oh and to some it would seem that it does indeed refer to food. See here :
http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:0IvxEv9V6R4 J:www.usingenglish.com/reference/phrasal-verbs /carry%2Bout.html+definition+get+carry+out&hl= en&ct=clnk&cd=7
I fail to see how it doesn't make sense in the carrying out sense from a shop when you put it in context. You carry it out from a shop to take to a party for example. In this scenario , it differs from just purchasing your usual shopping plus alcohol in the respect that you have only gone to the supermarket with the sole intention of purchasing alcohol to take it to drink elsewhere ie not your own home. So in this instance you are ONLY purchasing alcohol ........ well , maybe some pringles and choccy too. I am glad that we can all agre