释义 |
whacked adjective- exhausted UK, 1919
- We were exhausted. We’d been up all day and all night, our backs ached from leaning over the bed and we were just whacked. — Mark Olshaker and C.J. Peters, Virus Hunter, p. 112, 1997
- drunk or drug-intoxicated US, 1967
Also used with “out”. - I hadn’t counted on this: Finding my attorney whacked on acid and locked into some kind of preternatural courtship. — Hunter S. Thompson, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, p. 114, 1971
- Tooling down the highway, half whacked out of her skull on Quaaludes and Dexamyls she’d copped from an attendant servicing a station in Moline, Illinois, Joanie Brown was listening to a Merle Haggard tune on the radio[.] — Emmett Grogan, Final Score, p. 77, 1976
- Am I crazy, Paulie, or is Walter half-whacked? — Vincent Patrick, The Pope of Greenwich Village, p. 13, 1979
- They were so whacked out on painkillers they could not see and could not feel[.] — Larry Heinemann, Paco’s Story, pp. 52–53, 1986
- [I]f I’m in luck, they’ve just picked up a new shipment from uptown, and he’s been too whacked-out from his taste test to step on it. — Jim Carroll, Forced Entries, p. 11, 1987
- The Border Patrol agent left him alone then, and later said to his supervisor, “The guy’s whacked out on drugs, but I don’t think we really have anything.” — Joseph Wambaugh, Finnegan’s Week, p. 301, 1993
- [A]ll fucking whacked on cocaine and white wine. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 249, 2001
- out of control UK
- First times are always wacked. Just be glad you didn’t lose your virginity in the backseat of a rental car. — Kids, 1995
- — Susie Dent, The Language Report, p. 78, 2003
|