释义 |
juiced, a.|dʒuːst| [f. juice n. + -ed2.] 1. In combination: Having juice (of a specified quality).
1592Shakes. Rom. & Jul. ii. iii. 8 With balefull weedes, and precious Iuiced flowers. 1626Bacon Sylva §508 The Coloured [Berries] are more juyced and courser juyced. 1832Tennyson Lotos-Eaters 78 The full-juiced apple, waxing over-mellow. 2. Drunk. Also const. up. slang.
1946C. Himes Black on Black 260 She was an old wino used to come there every night and get juiced up. 1955D. W. Maurer in Publ. Amer. Dial. Soc. xxiv. x. 170 Men sufficiently juiced up to be robbed without much interference. 1956B. Holiday Lady sings Blues (1973) ii. 17 The doctor said if her man had even come to enough to raise the window and let in some air he could have saved her. But he was too juiced even for that. 1968A. Young in A. Chapman New Black Voices (1972) 149 Chicken Hawk and Wine, well-juiced, eased quietly up the back steps. 1969Time 24 Oct. 70 Later Marvin apologized: ‘I'm sorry I was so rotten this afternoon. I was a little juiced.’ 1971‘S. Ransome’ Trap 6 (1972) xiii. 147 He was sitting at the bar brooding over a drink—not making any trouble, not getting juiced up.
Add:3. Of a fruit, vegatable, etc.: that has had the juice extracted. Also fig.
1965Economist 28 Aug. 785/2 California—where on over 100,000 acres grow two-thirds of all the tomatoes tinned, juiced and ketchupped in the United States. 1981Guardian Weekly 29 Mar. 20/3 Albeit ‘juiced, tired, lonesome and run down’, Waits is now in a position to be more selective about his activities. 1988Boston Globe 21 Nov. 39/1 For the vinaigrette: 1 small sweet pomegranate, juiced to yield 1/3 cup liquid. |