释义 |
[ jind ] / dʒɪnd /
adjective Slang.drunk; intoxicated; inebriated. Origin of ginnedFirst recorded in 1895–1900; gin1 + -ed3 OTHER WORDS FROM ginnedun·ginned, adjectiveWords nearby ginnedginglymus, Gingrich, gink, ginkgo, gin mill, ginned, ginnel, ginnery, Ginnie Mae, Ginnungagap, Ginny Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for ginnedBesides, all this ginned up excitement is bad for our health. Hillary Clinton Faints: What Caused It?|Kent Sepkowitz|December 15, 2012|DAILY BEAST So observers have ginned up a competition between the wives. Michelle Obama and Ann Romney: First Ladies of Style|Robin Givhan|October 24, 2012|DAILY BEAST By “the people who ginned this up,” she means Fox News and its allies—about which more in a moment. Rachel's Accidental War|Lloyd Grove|August 24, 2010|DAILY BEAST After the cotton is ginned, it is gathered into bundles and roughly baled. The Story of the Cotton Plant|Frederick Wilkinson
The cotton-crop produced will not exceed sixty-five thousand pounds of ginned cotton. Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XII. September, 1863, No. LXXI.|Various They ginned the cotton with iron rods; a mechanical cotton gin was introduced not until later. A history of China., [3d ed. rev. and enl.]|Wolfram Eberhard The five acres were planted and properly worked—two heavy bales have been ginned and another light bale will be picked. How to Prosper in Boll Weevil Territory|G. H. Alford You never saw how much cotton was ginned, nor how much he got for it, nor how much it was worth nor nothing. Slave Narratives: Arkansas Narratives|Work Projects Administration
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