be+wrecked

  • 11wrecked — mod. alcohol or drug intoxicated. □ Four beers and I was wrecked. □ Larry was far too wrecked to drive …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 12wrecked — adjective destroyed in an accident a wrecked ship a highway full of wrecked cars • Similar to: ↑destroyed …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 13wrecked —    drunk or under the influence of illegal narcotics    The way you may feel and look:     They were half blitzed, but both Dolly and Dilford were totally wrecked. (Wambaugh, 1983) …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 14wrecked — adjective a) destroyed in an accident etc b) drunk …

    Wiktionary

  • 15wrecked — Synonyms and related words: aground, ausgespielt, bankrupt, blasted, blighted, botched, broken, castaway, desolated, destroyed, devastated, done for, done in, down and out, fallen, finished, foundered, gone to pot, grounded, high and dry, in… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 16wrecked — I Canadian Slang Someone who is very drunk, or very high on illegal drugs. II Everyday English Slang in Ireland (a) tired: a gaelic filler until you send something in! III Irish Slang tired …

    English dialects glossary

  • 17wrecked — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. demolished, destroyed, broken, knocked to pieces, ruined, smashed, shipwrecked, stranded, beached, grounded, scuttled, capsized, out of order, blown to bits, junked, dismantled, shattered, on the rocks*, gone to pot*,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 18wrecked — adj Drunk, intoxicated. Felix came in about 2 AM totallywrecked. 1960s …

    Historical dictionary of American slang

  • 19wrecked — adj intoxicated by drink or drugs. A coinage which parallels such dramatic usages as smashed, bombed, blitzed, destroyed, etc …

    Contemporary slang

  • 20wrecked — rekt adj. ruined, destroyed; devastated; shattered (e.g. one s hopes); sunken (e.g. of a ship); stranded, beached rek n. destruction; ruins, debris, remains; junk; nervous person; sunken ship; debris washed ashore v. ruin, destroy; devastate;… …

    English contemporary dictionary