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Definition of Sloshed
1. Adjective. Very drunk.
Language type: Argot, Cant, Jargon, Lingo, Patois, Slang, Vernacular
Similar to: Drunk, Inebriated, Intoxicated
Definition of Sloshed
1. Adjective. Very drunk. ¹
2. Verb. (simple past of slosh) ¹
3. Verb. (past participle of slosh) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sloshed
1. slosh [v] - See also: slosh
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sloshed
Literary usage of Sloshed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bullets & Billets by Bruce Bairnsfather (1917)
"Day after day, night after night, my companion and I lay and listened to the
daily explosions, read, and talked, and sloshed about that trench together. ..."
2. The Phonographic Word-book Number One ...: Intended Immediately to Succeed by Stephen Pearl Andrews, Augustus French Boyle (1849)
"... sloshed, sloshed, slashed. EXERCISE XCI. quarts, girts, forts, skirts, squi?-ts,
flirts. Containing seventeen words which are written by the use of a ..."
3. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern by Charles Dudley Warner, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George H Warner (1902)
"We sloshed you with Martinis, an' it wasn't 'ardly fair; But for all the odds
agin you, Fuzzy-Wuz, you bruk the square. 'E 'asn't got no papers of 'is own, ..."
4. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1870)
"It was a simple little jacket, fitting bi-r lovely shoulders most perfectly,
sloshed at the side» and back, and trimmed all round with one row of velvet ..."
5. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1907)
"The hail drove out of the blackness, sloshed over the drenching bridge, penetrated
every cranny, stinging with bitter cold. ..."