释义 |
high adjective- drunk or drug-intoxicated UK, 1627
- [He] seldom touched anything stronger than brown ale. I’ve only known him get high twice. — Charles Raven, Underworld Nights, p. 85, 1956
- I wish you could have seen him, pleasantly “high” with drinks, take his seat with dignity[.] — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 89, 1964
- I drank more Scotch but this time with ice and water, not wanting to get too high. — Sara Harris, The Lords of Hell, p. 185, 1967
- under the influence of a drug, especially marijuana US, 1931
- He’d light up and get real high[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 51, 1946
- “You’re smoking too many of them,” Larry said. “You’re high now.” — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 99, 1947
- Sure, man, that cat’s real high on tea! Look at those big, starin eyes. Get that! — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 100, 1952
- We get some frantic kicks out of that wheel when we’re high. — William Burroughs, Junkie, p. 28, 1953
- Jumpsteady always keyed himself up high on dope when he worked. — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 90, 1964
- I did not for one minute think that anything was wrong with getting high. — Eldridge Cleaver, Soul on Ice, p. 4, 1968
- And almost immediately a rumor swept the land that butterfly eggs would get you high. — Tom Robbins, Another Roadside Attraction, p. 8, 1971
- My cousin Kendall from Indiana, he got high once and you know, he started eating like really weird foods. — The Breakfast Club, 1985
- Getting high is about experiencing reality from a different level[.] — Mike Rock, This Book, 1999
- bad-smelling TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, 1935
- — Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago, 2003
▶ at high warble angry, especially without justification US Naval aviator usage.- — United States Naval Institute Proceedings, p. 108, October 1986
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