
pissed



INFORMAL
pissed /pɪst/ adjective [not before noun]
ˌpissed ˈoff (also pissed) adjective [not before noun]
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Synonyms & Related Wordspissed[adjective]Synonyms: angry, choleric, heated, irate, ireful, mad, shirty, waxy, wrathful, wroth, intoxicated, boozy, canned, disguised, drunk, inebriated, lushed, muddled, pixilated, plastered
English Thesaurus: drunk, tipsy/merry, pissed, intoxicated, paralytic/legless, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English DictionaryI. pissed /pɪst/
adjective [not before noun] informal1. British English drunk:
They rolled in pissed at three in the morning.pissed as a newt/pissed out of your head (=extremely drunk)2. American English pissed off [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. ˌpissed ˈoff (
also pissed American English)
adjective [not before noun] informal annoyed, disappointed, or unhappy:
You get really pissed off applying for jobs all the time.pissed off with/at
I was pissed off with the way some people were behaving.
Judy’s pissed at Carol. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Thesaurusdrunk [not usually before noun] having drunk too much alcohol so that your behaviour and mental processes are affected:
Gary was too drunk to remember what had happened that night.
I just hope they don’t get drunk and start fighting.
drunk driving
The police are going to crack down on drunk drivers.tipsy/merry [not before noun] slightly drunk:
After the second glass of wine I was feeling a little tipsy.pissed [not usually before noun] British English informal drunk – this word is very common in spoken British English, but it is not polite:
Don’t listen to him – he’s pissed.intoxicated [not before noun] formal drunk:
He was arrested for driving while intoxicated.paralytic/legless [not before noun] British English informal extremely drunk:
Don’t give Dave any more to drink -- he’s already legless.
They became totally paralytic and abusive.drunken [only before noun] especially written used to describe someone who is drunk or their behaviour.
Drunken is mainly used in written English and is always used before a noun. Don’t say ‘he is drunken’. Say
he is drunk:
A drunken man was found lying outside a shop door.
We found him lying by the roadside in a drunken stupor (=almost unconscious as a result of being drunk). [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲