blotto, a. slang.
(ˈblɒtəʊ)
[Obscurely f. blot.]
Fuddled with liquor, intoxicated.
1917 W. Muir Observations of Orderly xiv. 230 The words for drunkenness are innumerable—‘jingled’, ‘oiled’, ‘tanked to the wide’, ‘well sprung’, ‘up the pole’, ‘blotto’, etc. 1919 Winter's Pie Pl. 17. 1921 Blackw. Mag. Feb. 157/1 The evening's potations left him, by bed-time, in a state somewhere between ‘blotto’ and ‘blithero-blotto’. 1923 Daily Mail 13 June 12, I got properly ‘blotto’ and don't know what I did. 1951 Wodehouse Old Reliable xiii. 149 Did you ever see a blotto butler before? |