释义 |
▪ I. druggy, a.|ˈdrʌgɪ| [f. drug n.1 + -y.] 1. a. Of, pertaining to, or of the nature of drugs or medicinal substances.
1583Stubbes Anat. Abus. ii. (1882) 55 It is hard to get anything of them [apothecaries] that is right pure and good of it selfe, but druggie baggage, and such counterfait stuffe as is starke naught. 1632Quarles Div. Fancies iii. lxxxviii. (1660) 136 His loathed Potion..Whose druggy taste goes so against their mind. 1890H. James tr. Daudet's Port Tarascon i. vi, The druggy aroma. b. Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of narcotic drugs or their users; consisting of drug-takers. colloq.
1959J. E. Schmidt Narcotics Lingo & Lore 84 Hoppy—Having a peculiar ‘druggy’ odor. 1971Time 17 May 34 It begins with that familiar buzzing, distorted guitar sound and inimitable druggy sentiments. 1972Village Voice (N.Y.) 1 June 76/2 He..pronounced, in an affable druggy drawl, [etc.]. 1984Times 8 Oct. 13/1, I was enmeshed in a very druggy crowd at the time. ¶2. Error or misprint for dreggy.
1599Middleton Micro-Cynicon Wks. VIII. 116 Druggy lees, mix'd with the liquid flood. 1627–47Feltham Resolves i. xix. 66 Transcending the sense of the druggie flesh. ▪ II. druggy, n. slang.|ˈdrʌgɪ| Also druggie. [f. drug n.1 + -y6, -ie.] One who takes or experiments with illegal drugs, a drug-addict.
1968Harper's Mag. Feb. 70/2 In the case of the new druggies, their rage for ‘experience’ passes over into a form of hedonism. 1970Globe & Mail (Toronto) 25 Sept. 6/6 Don't look at the fathers and mothers of the druggies..; look at their schoolmates and other companions. 1972Times Lit. Suppl. 7 Apr. 385/2 Jill, a juvenile druggy. 1974Sunday Sun (Brisbane) 3 June 1/1 A druggie who has been ordered to be detained at Wolston Park Hospital for at least six months. 1979Washington Post 30 Mar. (Weekend Suppl.) 29/1 Sherlock Holmes fans..remember his portrayal as an angstridden druggie a few years back. 1985Time 29 Apr. 49/1 [A] room full of disillusioned longhairs, counterculture falconers, druggie surfers,..paranoid vets. |