cokehead

cokehead

One who is addicted to cocaine. Ralph used to be a cokehead, that's why he went to rehab.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

cokehead

n. a heavy cocaine user; a cocaine addict. (Drugs.) We get a few depressed cokeheads in the emergency room who have tried suicide.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • coke
  • #dead
  • on one's
  • on someone's
  • pillow-biter
  • (Have you) been OK?
  • (something) blows
  • (as) gay as a three-dollar bill
  • out of one's
  • (I've) got to go
References in periodicals archive
Natalie Chapman, prosecuting, said: "He's then called and texted her, calling her names such as a scruffy little cokehead and a slag via Snapchat and iChat.
I could win 12 Oscars and I'd still be known as that cokehead off EastEnders DANNIELLA ON HOW WILD CHILD PAST STILL HAUNTS HER Alan is open, honest and loyal.
Every great general and warrior from the beginning of time was high," writes Tyson before explaining how he became a "full-blown cokehead".
Mehrotra's heroine not only battles her inner demons, she also sorts out the life of her cokehead cousin, who works as a designer's assistant.
She, being a peace-loving, mostly vegetarian, hippie-hooker cokehead masochist, doesn't like fighting and in her own warped jealous way, admits that she doesn't want to watch me hurt someone who isn't her.
"I was a pin-up on thousands of bedroom walls but the fear of loneliness was turning me into a cokehead."
As for said individual narratives: Nick's horrible boss is sociopath-leaning-toward-psychopath Dave (Kevin Spacey); Kurt's is Bobby (Colin Farrell), the aggressive loser cokehead son of the newly deceased company owner; and, most improbable of all, Dale's boss is one-note blackmailing nympho dentist Julia (Jennifer Aniston), the last character a misogynist male fantasy so thoroughly beyond the pale of everyday existence that it could only have been concocted by Hollywood screenwriters.
*** Horrible Bosses (15) Three put upon employees conspire to murder their bosses - bully Kevin Spacey, cokehead Colin Farrell and nymphomaniac Jennifer Aniston - with the help of a supposed hit man.
So, as a nation of Mr and Mrs Track E Bottoms, fuelled by a liquid diet of ultra-cheap, super strong, supermarket-sold, brain destroying, dementia juice, dance the Hokey Cokehead, vital parts of our community life are being boarded up and left to rot.
Right from the heart-stopping opening, and all the way to its cheer-provoking climax, it compels you to read on like a cokehead greedy for line after line after line." KATIE LAW
Meanwhile, PQ leader Andre Boisclair is gay, a former cokehead and holds views on the economic potential of Quebec that senior Liberal federalist Stephane Dion describes as "puerile." Puerile or not, Boisclair has declared he would call a separation vote immediately after his party wins its expected victory.
GHOSTWRITERS USE GHOSTWRITERS WHO USE GHOSTWRITERS, I TOOK ON EXTRA WORK, STARTING WITH THE DISGRACED COKEHEAD CELEBRITY ...
Vince, portrayed by Hawke in an electrifying performance as a hyperactive cokehead prone to violent mood swings who's carried a well-dissembled grudge against his best friend, has saved up his vengeance for the evening before Jon, an aspiring filmmaker, will present his first real film in the Lansing Film Festival.
The opening cut starts with some what at first seems to be some vague noodling, then slowly segues into the recognizable melody of "I Heard It through the Grapevine," a song most of us associate with the late Marvin Gaye (one of the saddest stories ever--the beautiful man who helped many of us get through the war years becomes a cokehead and is shot to death by his father, a minister), although Marvin did not write it.
After Michael leaves the building, he sarcastically comments, "I like your new friends." When Alice asks if he met Malcolm, he replies, "Big black guy?" She smiles and tells Michael, "He's a cokehead (pause), the girls are with him." Michael reacts with a start, but Alice quickly adds, "He's not a child molester, he's an armed robber." The scene is played for laughs, but it also illustrates that Alice has looked beyond the exterior of her fellow patients and has recognized their common "affliction." However, the "humor" of the exchange comes from stereotyped images of the menacing black addict who must be kept away from white women, especially little girls.