释义 |
spaced out adjective- drug-intoxicated; disoriented US, 1970
Conventionally “space” is beyond the frontiers of normality. - Nothing can ever be the same / You’re spaced out on sensation / Like you’re under sedation — Richard O’Brien, The Rocky Horror Show, 1973
- “What did the participants think of the Melchett report on pop festival?”–“Just spaced out” — The Observer, 13 June 1976
- [W]e were both sort of really spaced out, the room was swirling and I couldn’t tell where I began or anything else[.] — Paul E Willis, Profane Culture, p. 142, 1978
- If I didn’t know better I’d never come down myself. I was just lying there spaced out in all that beauty of mountain and streams and trees. — Beatrice Sparks (writing as “Anonymous”), Jay’s Journal, 1979
- stupefied from anaesthetic US
- — American Speech, p. 205, Fall-Winter 1973: “The language of nursing”
|