pissed
English
Etymology
From Middle English pissed, pissede, pyssyd, pisside, equivalent to piss + -ed.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pɪst/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪst
Adjective
pissed (comparative more pissed, superlative most pissed)
- (Britain, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, colloquial) very drunk.
- 1996, Hunter Davies, The Beatles, page 79:
- The waiters would send us up beer onstage as well as food, so now and again we'd end up getting pissed while we were playing.
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- (US, Canada, mildly vulgar, colloquial) Annoyed, angry.
- 1987, Die Hard, written by Jeb Stuart, Steven E. DeSouza:
- That one looks pissed, Ms. Gennero...
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Usage notes
In Canada, pissed can mean either drunk or angry. The term pissed off is commonly used to unambiguously give the meaning angry.
Synonyms
- (drunk): drunk, intoxicated, bladdered, blotto, plastered, rat-arsed; see also Thesaurus:drunk
- (annoyed, angry): pissed off; see also Thesaurus:angry
Translations
drunk
See also
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