¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stinko
1. drunk [adj] - See also: drunk
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stinko
Literary usage of Stinko
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Treatise on Applied Analytical Chemistry by Vittorio Villavecchia (1918)
"These consist of the branches and twigs of the plant itself and also of other
plants of less value, especially Pistacia lentiscus (stinko or lentisco) and ..."
2. Treatise on Applied Analytical Chemistry by Vittorio Villavecchia (1918)
"These consist of the branches and twigs of the plant itself and also of other
plants of less value, especially Pistacia lentiscus (stinko or lentisco) and ..."
3. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1850)
"Right Utilitarians—and stinko-malee-men. 198. Eating a cuttle fish alive. 206.
Candle nuts. 208. Chiefs convoked when a great dust is unwell. 209. ..."
4. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"... Utilitarians—and stinko-malee-men. 198. Eating a cuttle fish alive. 206.
Candle nuts. 208. Chiefs convoked when a great chief is unwell. 209. ..."
5. Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey by Robert Southey, John Wood Warter (1856)
"The great Johannes and I understood one another very well, thanks to Dionysius,
the Tyrant of stinko- malee. Instead of coming to the ground between two ..."
6. The A. E. F.: With General Pershing and the American Forces by Heywood Broun (1918)
"... pinko, stinko, sloppy drunk. Any man who gets drunk goes in the guard house
of course and more than that he will get no promotion from me. ..."