- flaked-out
- [͵fleıktʹaʋt] a разг.
измотанный, измочаленный; без сил
Новый большой англо-русский словарь. 2001.
Новый большой англо-русский словарь. 2001.
flaked out — 1. mod. alcohol intoxicated. □ You are too flaked out to drive home. Give me your keys. □ Man, is she flaked out! 2. AND flaked mod. passed out because of drugs. (Drugs.) □ Sally was flaked out on the sofa … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
flaked out — adj exhausted, collapsed … Contemporary slang
flaked out — Exhausted … A concise dictionary of English slang
out — Synonyms and related words: abandoned, aberrant, abjured, abroad, absurd, adrift, alibi, all abroad, all off, all wrong, aloud, amiss, antiquated, antique, apparent, apparently, appear, archaic, askew, asleep, astray, at a loss, at fault, audibly … Moby Thesaurus
flaked — Go to flaked out … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
flake out — 1. in. to pass out from exhaustion; to fall asleep. □ I just flaked out. I had had it. □ After jogging, I usually flake for awhile. 2. in. to fall asleep after drug use. (Drugs.) □ An hour after she took the stuff, she just flaked … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
flake out — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms flake out : present tense I/you/we/they flake out he/she/it flakes out present participle flaking out past tense flaked out past participle flaked out British informal to go to sleep very quickly because you … English dictionary
flake out — informal she flaked out in her chair Syn: fall asleep, go to sleep, drop off; collapse, faint, pass out, lose consciousness, black out, swoon; informal conk out, nod off, sack out … Thesaurus of popular words
flake out — lie down and sleep, conk out Grant flaked out on the couch after lunch. He was really tired … English idioms
flake out — v Start acting peculiar, odd, eccentric. He was a good philosophy teacher before he fell in love with a hippy and flaked out. 1960s … Historical dictionary of American slang
flake — flake1 [fleık] n [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From a Scandinavian language; related to Norwegian flak disk ] 1.) a small thin piece that breaks away easily from something else flake of ▪ flakes of snow ▪ chocolate flakes →↑snowflake … Dictionary of contemporary English