different between plastered vs pissed

plastered

English

Pronunciation

Adjective

plastered (comparative more plastered, superlative most plastered)

  1. Coated with plaster
    The old home had plastered walls rather than drywall.
  2. (slang) drunk, intoxicated
    The only way he could deal with the grief following his wife's death was to get so plastered that he passed out.

Synonyms

  • (coated with plaster):
  • (drunk): See Thesaurus:drunk

Verb

plastered

  1. simple past tense and past participle of plaster

Anagrams

  • restapled

plastered From the web:

  • plastered meaning
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  • what is plastered walls
  • what does plastered mean drunk
  • what does plastered mean in english
  • what does plastered
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pissed

English

Etymology

From Middle English pissed, pissede, pyssyd, pisside, equivalent to piss +? -ed.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /p?st/
  • Rhymes: -?st

Verb

pissed

  1. simple past tense and past participle of piss

Adjective

pissed (comparative more pissed, superlative most pissed)

  1. (Britain, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, colloquial) Drunk.
  2. (US, Canada, mildly vulgar, colloquial) Annoyed, angry.

Usage notes

In Canada and Australia, 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

See also

  • pissed as a newt

Anagrams

  • sepsid, spides

pissed From the web:

  • what pissed you off lately
  • what pissed godzilla off
  • what pissed me off lately
  • how to pissed someone off
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