释义 |
juiced; juiced up adjective- drunk US, 1941
- Just look at the difference between you and them other cats, that come uptown juiced to the gills[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 213, 1946
- I was high or juiced most of the time and staying by myself most of the time again except I’d run for Juan. — Hal Ellson, Duke, p. 160, 1949
- One stud got juiced and played the flunky, to a very surprised old Brazilian monkey. — Dan Burley, Diggeth Thou?, p. 17, 1959
- I went out and get a little juiced up on beer. — Robert Gover, The Maniac Responsible, p. 165, 1963
- He’s a slender not-yet middle-aged man–well dressed–although in his juiced-up state, his clothes are slightly disheveled. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 97, 1963
- You’ve gone to the finest school all right, Miss Lonely / But you know you only used to get juiced in it. — Bob Dylan, Like a Rolling Stone, 1965
- This town’s got four hundred people that stay juiced out of their minds–cause they’re depressed because they’re there. — Lenny Bruce, The Essential Lenny Bruce, p. 95, 1967
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 146, 1968
- And we’d go up to somebody’s place and sit on a mattress and get juiced. — Leonard Wolfe (Editor), Voices from the Love Generation, p. 66, 1968
- He got juiced and almost ran into a trailer truck coming back. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 117, 1975
- energised US, 1978
- She walked fast towards Canal Street subway, then changed her mind. She was juiced, she’d walk down Broadway. — Chris Niles, Revenge is the Best Revenge [Tart Noir], p. 12, 2002
- caffeinated US
Borrowing from the language of car fuel for application to the world of coffee drinks and, to a lesser extent, soft drinks. - — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 4, Fall 1996
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