释义 |
smashed, ppl. a.|smæʃt| [f. smash v.1 + -ed1.] 1. Crushed; broken to pieces. Also fig. and smashed-down, smashed-up.
1819Shelley Peter Bell 3rd. i. xv, Smashed glass—and nothing more! 1857Janet Hamilton Lessons fr. Gt. Biogr. (1859) 289 A pile of smashed pillars and scorched timbers. 1897M. Kingsley W. Africa 251 A mass of slimy gray abomination on a bit of plantain leaf—smashed snail. 1909J. R. Ware Passing Eng. 227/1 Smashed (Navy), reduced in rank. 1915J. Webster Dear Enemy 325 Our poor smashed-up doctor. 1918W. S. Churchill in M. Gilbert Winston S. Churchill (1977) IV. Compan. i. 365 Ought we to build our lives & policy & the future arrangement of the world on the unreal basis of a smashed-up Russia & an invincible Germany. 1935A. J. Pollock Underworld Speaks 109/1 Smashed, to have lost all material possessions. 1938E. Blunden in Times Lit. Suppl. 8 Oct. 633/2 Nor the dead in smashed-down den. 1982J. Hansen Gravedigger iii. 24 No abandoned or smashed-up Rollses. 2. Intoxicated, drunk; under the influence of drugs; ‘stoned’. slang (orig. U.S.).
1962J. D. MacDonald Key to Suite (1968) viii. 139 Are you figuring on getting smashed? 1968New Scientist 26 Sept. 679/2 The males rapidly acquired a taste for the stuff [sc. alcohol], bent their elbows with great application, and soon became smashed. 1968A. Young in A. Chapman New Black Voices (1972) 147 Turns out he was half-smashed and half-drunk because he'd smoked some dope when he got up that morning, then on the way to school he'd met up with Wine, so the two of them did up a fifth of Nature Boy, a brand of sweet wine. 1973D. Laing Freaks 20 He would get smashed on two and a half pints of Worthington E from the wood, and fall about misquoting the poetry of the beat generation. 1977New Society 27 Jan. 185/3 If you're smashed out of your skull all the time on peyote, then even the bizarre patronage of Marlon Brando must seem tolerable. |