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  1. Dictionary
    whacked
    /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"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 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.

  3. Whacked definition: exhausted; tired out.. See examples of WHACKED used in a sentence.

  4. to strike with a smart or resounding blow; to cut with or as if with a whack : chop; to get the better of : defeat… See the full definition

  5. 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.

  6. (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.

  7. Definition of whacked adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Definitions of whacked. adjective. (British informal) exhausted or worn out. synonyms: tired. depleted of strength or energy. Cite this entry. Style: MLA. "Whacked." Vocabulary.com Dictionary, Vocabulary.com, https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/whacked. Accessed 29 Sep. 2024. Copy citation. Teachers,

  9. 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.

  10. 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.

  11. 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.