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- Dictionarywhacked/wakt/
adjective
- 1. completely exhausted: "I'm not staying long—I'm whacked"
- 2. under the influence of drugs: North American "a sixteen-year-old whacked out on acid"
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suffering the effects of drugs or alcohol: He was whacked-out on speed, jabbering a mile a minute and making no sense at all. UK informal. strange or unusual: His story sounded totally whacked, but it was true. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Tired and making tired. all in. anti-fatigue. at your worst idiom. be dead on your feet idiom.
1. Informal. exhausted. 2. Slang. stoned (sense 2) Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved. Word origin. pp. of whack. whacked in American English. (hwækt, wækt) adjective. chiefly Brit slang. exhausted; tired out.
Whacked definition: exhausted; tired out.. See examples of WHACKED used in a sentence.
noun. 1. a. : a smart or resounding blow. also : the sound of or as if of such a blow. b. : a critical attack. 2. : portion, share. 3.
(colloquial, US) Tired; fatigued. After that all-night party we were all whacked. Wiktionary. verb. Simple past tense and past participle of whack. Wiktionary. Synonyms: clouted. caught. smitten. socked. struck. bashed. popped. slogged. slugged. hit. knocked. slammed. whammed. whopped.
(British informal) exhausted or worn out.
Definition of whacked adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
Aug 24, 1997 · adjective. crazy or irrational. Also whacked out. Dude, don't worry about her - she's wacked. Will you just calm down? You're all wacked out! See more words with the same meaning: crazy, insane, weird, strange. Last edited on Aug 24 1997. Submitted by Jamie Leigh from SC, USA on Aug 24 1997. notes. " Whacked " is also the past tense of "whack".
to strike or hit with or as if with a strong, loud blow: [~ + object] She whacked the stick against the table. [no object] He whacked at the ball and missed. n. [countable] a smart, resounding blow: She gave him a whack on the knuckles.
whacked From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English whacked /wækt/ adjective [not before noun] informal 1 (also whacked out) very tired You look absolutely whacked. 2 → whacked out 3 (also whack) American English informal a whacked situation is very strange, especially in an unacceptable way Everyone was running around naked.