Definition of Hungover

1. Adjective. Suffering from a hangover ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Hungover

1. suffering from a hangover [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Hungover

hunger is the best sauce
hunger is the best spice
hunger march
hunger marcher
hunger pain
hunger strike
hunger strikes
hungered
hungerer
hungerers
hungering
hungeringly
hungerless
hungerly
hungers
hungover (current term)
hungred
hungrier
hungriest
hungrily
hungriness
hungrinesses
hungry
hungry(p)
hungry as a hog
hungry ghost
hungry ghosts
hunh
hunk of junk

Literary usage of Hungover

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1835)
"From a rocky bank, more or less seen as the intermitting foliage allowed, arose trees, with dark but occasionally golden edged boles, that mostly hungover ..."

2. Seal and Salmon Fisheries and General Resources of Alaska by Henry Wood Elliott, Washburn Maynard, Sheldon Jackson, David Starr Jordan, United States Dept. of the Treasury. Special Agents Division, Leonhard Hess Stejneger, William Gouverneur Morris, Ivan Petroff, Charles Haskins Townsend, Frederick William True, (1898)
"The door to this structure is a low, square hole at one end, large enough to admit a stooping person, and a bearskin is usually hungover it, or a plank is ..."

3. Once a Week by Eneas Sweetland Dallas (1867)
"... with sixteen strings, and rosettes to each knee; tho boots very short, and finished with very broad straps, which hungover tho tops, and down to the ..."

4. Tait's Edinburgh Magazine by William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone (1838)
"He hungover her affectionately, as he delivered, with an earnest truthfulness that could not be mistaken, this outburst of fond and disinterested love, ..."

5. The Big Game of North America: Its Habits, Habitats, Haunts, and by George O. Shields (1890)
"The sun had just risen above the horizon, full, round, and red, and seemed three times his natural size, in the morning mist which yet hungover mountain and ..."

6. Magazine of Natural History (1830)
"... but two years ago, hungover us as an incubus, and threatened our dc* debt is now happily reduced from MM. to little more than 5(V.; and, ..."

7. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1865)
"... thought hungover some of the societies of more modern times, so miserable has been the attendance at their evening meetings. According to Sir Benjamin, ..."

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