释义 |
pilled; pilled up adjective under the influence of central nervous system stimulants or depressants US- Most of the meths men are on drugs, many of them pilled up to the eyeballs. — Geoffrey Fletcher, Down Among the Meths Men, p. 31, 1966
- — American Speech, p. 282, December 1966: “More carnie talk from the west coast”
- [S]ix or seven blokes in a ring, all pilled out of their tiny minds[.] — Ian Hebditch, Weekend, The Sharper Word, p. 134, 1969
- I figured he was pilled up to the eyeballs. — Jamie Mandelkau, Buttons, p. 28, 1971
- I was all pilled up–I had a pill habit at that time with the dope habit. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 76, 1972
- Mods; young boys and girls pilled to the eyeballs — Irish Jack, History, The Sharper Word, p. 31, 1998
- “ Stutter the words–it makes you sound pilled” and I said, “Oh... like I am!” — Roger Daltrey describing the recording of ‘My Generation’, 1965, Uncut, p. 44, January 2003
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