flaked out

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.
Jerry took the stuff and ended up flaked.
3. mod. unconscious; exhausted; tired out.
Tom? He’s upstairs flaked out from work.
There are too many flaked out people working at dangerous machines.

Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions. 2015.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • 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

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