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  1. Dictionary
    plastered
    /ˈplɑːstəd/

    adjective

    • 1. very drunk: informal "I went out and got totally plastered"
    • 2. covered with or made of plaster: "coarsely plastered brickwork"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. adjective [ after verb ] informal uk / ˈplɑː.stəd / us / ˈplæs.tɚd / Add to word list. extremely drunk: They went out to the bars and got plastered. Synonyms. blind drunk informal. blotto old-fashioned slang. pie-eyed informal. sloshed slang. smashed slang. sozzled UK informal. squiffy informal old-fashioned.

  3. adjective. plas· tered ˈpla-stərd. Synonyms of plastered. slang. : drunk, intoxicated. Move over, children. Go eat your mini eggs somewhere else as your auntie wants to get plastered. Mel Ramsay. … oh we were plastered, we barely knew what we were doing … Dave Eggers.

  4. If someone's broken arm or leg is plastered, it has a hard cover of plaster of Paris around it to protect the broken bone while it is mending. She was sitting in a hospital bed, her plastered leg up in the air.

  5. overlaid or spread or topped with or enclosed within something; sometimes used as a combining form. adjective. (of hair) made smooth by applying a sticky or glossy substance. “black hair plastered with pomade” synonyms: slicked. groomed. neat and smart in appearance; well cared for. adjective. very drunk. synonyms: cockeyed.

  6. a substance that becomes hard as it dries and is used especially for spreading on walls and ceilings in order to give a smooth surface: The plaster on the walls was cracked and flaking. See also. plasterboard mainly UK. in plaster UK (US in a cast)

  7. 1. If something is plastered to a surface, it is sticking to the surface. [...] 2. If something or someone is plastered with a sticky substance, they are covered with it. [...] 3. If a story or photograph is plastered all over the front page of a newspaper, it is given a lot of space on the page and made very noticeable. [...] More.

  8. a substance that becomes hard as it dries and is used especially for spreading on walls and ceilings in order to give a smooth surface: The plaster on the walls was cracked and flaking. See also. plasterboard mainly UK. in plaster UK (US in a cast)

  9. There are two meanings listed in OED's entry for the adjective plastered. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence. This word is used in U.S. English. plastered has developed meanings and uses in subjects including.

  10. Definitions of 'plastered' 1. If something is plastered to a surface, it is sticking to the surface. [...] 2. If something or someone is plastered with a sticky substance, they are covered with it. [...] 3. If a story or photograph is plastered all over the front page of a newspaper, it is given a lot of space on the page and made very noticeable.

  11. [usually passive] to make your hair flat and stick to your head. be plastered + adv./prep. His wet hair was plastered to his head. [often passive] to completely cover a surface with pictures or posters. A is plastered with B Her bedroom wall was plastered with photos of him.