druggy

druggie

slang A drug addict. Yeah, I used to be a druggie, but that was a long time ago—before I went to rehab.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

druggie

and druggy
n. a drug addict or user. There are too many druggies in this neighborhood.

druggy

verb
See druggie
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • druggie
  • on one's
  • on someone's
  • (Have you) been OK?
  • #dead
  • pillow-biter
  • out of one's
  • (I've) got to go
  • save someone's skin
  • (something) blows
References in periodicals archive
"The whole time he was yelling 'she is going to take all my money' and 'her ex is a druggy, her ex is a druggy'.'
When he gets a call from his druggy chum Macca saying the police are on his tail, he rushes round to David's to tell him he needs an alibi - and that alibi is going to be him.
That's probably not fair on Bobby and the boys - even at their most druggy and wall-licking, they were bound to have someone else sort all the logistical stuff out for them.
And that disorder that induces purchasing consumer goods just for the feel-good sensation does vaguely resemble the plight of both rummy and druggy.
Saying that, however, all of the contestants on the final were a refreshing change from the druggy crew we see in the newspapers every day.
Not a druggy or low-life in sight, just people celebrating the occasion.
His first big attention-getters, Labyrinth of Passion, Dark Habits (set in a convent of drug-dealing lesbian nuns), and the pan-sexual thriller Law of Desire, focus with documentarian precision on the cultural explosion in Madrid during the decade known as La Movida, a sexually freewheeling, druggy, political uprising that rocked Spain after the death of fascist dictator Francisco Franco in 1975.
The dancing projects a druggy sexuality: physical neediness but also indifference.
Effete, druggy soccer players have also come out badly in comparison with clean-cut, manly rugby stars such as England hero Jonny Wilkinson.