释义 |
stewed adjective drunk US, 1737 Another drunk synonym, first recorded by Benjamin Franklin.- But one morning she and Frankie had drunk from the same can and gotten as stewed, all by themselves, as any two twelve-year-olds in an West Side horse-and-wagon alley can get. — Nelson Algren, The Man with the Golden Arm, p. 62, 1949
- You know. Drunk, stewed, clobbered, gone, liquored up, oiled, stoned, in the bag. — Max Shulman, Guided Tour of Campus Humor, p. 106, 1955
- I was suddenly tired. Not stewed or even excited or lonely; just plain tired out. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 182, 1961
- I guess they both reasoned my pardner was still stewed from the Kingfish’s gigglesoup. — Guy Owen, The Flim-Flam Man and the Apprentice Grifter, p. 116, 1972
- — Ramon Adams, The Language of the Railroader, p. 146, 1977
- “Let’s you and me get stewed tonight and talk about old times.” — Glenn Savan, White Palace, p. 257, 1987
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