| 释义 | 
		Definition of knackered in English: knackeredadjectiveˈnakəd British informal 1Extremely tired.  you look absolutely knackered  Example sentencesExamples -  By the time I got home I was knackered.
 -  By this time I had added sunstroke and dehydration to being absolutely knackered.
 -  She was sitting at the foot of the sofa watching TV, obviously knackered, whilst Dom played with his fire engine.
 -  I am supposed to be going dancing but I am knackered, so I will probably stay in and feel sorry for myself instead.
 -  A quick note to self - being knackered enough to end up asleep on the sofa all night is not a good thing.
 -  The problem was that we were knackered by the time Saturday came round.
 -  It took me a while to admit I was knackered.
 -  I rowed and rowed and rowed until I was knackered.
 -  Anybody too knackered to lift a cup of tea to parched lips can have it intravenously.
 -  I had to have a little snooze this afternoon as I was completely knackered.
 -  I still had to get up early for work in the morning… which is why I feel absolutely knackered now.
 -  He walks off the pitch looking absolutely knackered.
 -  Once the euphoria has ebbed away, Torrance will be entitled to feel a bit knackered.
 -  By now the previous day had caught up with me and I was pretty knackered, and then there was the drive home.
 -  The least likely recruit was perhaps Andy, who met us at Central Station looking, frankly, knackered.
 -  Went to bed before midnight last night, fell asleep relatively quickly and woke up this morning feeling as knackered as I have all week.
 -  Felt bloody awful when I finished - too knackered to feel properly pleased!
 -  Work and looking after our son leaves me knackered.
 -  I was completely knackered on arrival, suggesting that walking the complete trail from 100 to 1 might be overdoing it somewhat.
 -  Britain is full of knackered working parents who need childcare centres.
 
  Synonyms exhausted, tired out, worn out, weary, dog-tired, bone-tired, bone-weary, ready to drop, on one's last legs, asleep on one's feet, drained, fatigued, enervated, debilitated, spent - 1.1 Worn out or damaged by overuse.
 Example sentencesExamples -  A few days later, I decided out of curiosity to see whether the old vcr is still knackered.
 -  If one pulls the other way, the whole thing is knackered. "
 -  She wanted something "reliable, good value and not as embarrassing as my knackered old Nissan Micra".
 -  You can see it, though, can't you: there's nothing so pathetic and washed up as a really knackered old shoe.
 -  We have been told so often that Scottish football is knackered that we have come to believe it.
 -  But we all know the embattled financially knackered rail service is again going to walk away from this with no one held accountable.
 -  Celebrate that space bloke fixing his knackered old shuttle by playing the Solar Games.
 -  In fact it was rigged with what looked suspiciously like 10 year old and totally knackered Oxford gear!
 -  Or maybe the electronic engine control unit is knackered.
 -  Funnily enough, 68 years on, that equipment is knackered.
 -  Well I can ask the same question on my knackered old gas cooker.
 -  But fortunately the front lock is very knackered, so didn't actually work on this occasion.
 
  Synonyms broken, damaged, faulty, defective, unsound  
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