swacked, ppl. a. U.S. slang.
(swækt)
[f. swack v.1 in Sc. dial. sense ‘to gulp, swill’ + -ed1.]
Drunk, intoxicated.
| 1932 Amer. Speech VII. 436 A man drunk is ‘limp’, ‘tight’, ‘swacked’. 1936 Wodehouse Laughing Gas ix. 93 My father used to drink till he saw the light, and he prided himself on being able to say anything at any time of the day or night, no matter how swacked he might be, without tripping over a syllable. 1965 H. Kane Devil to Pay (1966) iii. 17 I'm slightly swacked on champagne. 1977 J. Wambaugh Black Marble (1978) vi. 71 They said he was bombed, swacked, bagged. By noon? She wasn't sure if it was booze. |