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drugged-out
[druhgd-out]
adjective
being under the influence of drugs, especially a narcotic or an illicit drug.
Example Sentences
Matt Roush writes, “Jason Isaacs was a revelation as the drugged-out depressive dad in ‘The White Lotus.’”
Zach Cherry, “Severance” “John Turturro broke our hearts as the exiled ‘innie’ from ‘Severance,’ and Jason Isaacs was a revelation as the drugged-out depressive dad in ‘The White Lotus.’
But trouble seems to follow the PI wherever he goes; in Mexico, it’s a drugged-out gangster patient who attacks the doctor and his nurses, and whom Doll kills, with great regret: “Diablo was the eighth man I had killed,” the investigator reflects later, “and it was always in self-defense, in situations in which I could have also been killed, but each time I had done it I had felt the sickening pull of the abyss, of becoming a shadow human impervious to the suffering of others.”
Police in Seattle charged a man Tuesday with wounding one person and opening fire at another during a drugged-out shooting spree on Interstate 5.
I’ve had drugged-out, bloated times in my life and was just too deep in that world to give a f—.
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