English

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Etymology 1

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Adjective

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blicked (comparative more blicked, superlative most blicked)

  1. Out of it; intoxicated or not thinking clearly.
    • 1991, Jill Eisenstadt, Kiss Out, page 215:
      It's just I was, ya know, gone last night, blicked.
    • 2008, Robert Knightly, Denis Hamill, Alan Gordon, Queens Noir:
      “You keep tellin' me you don't need takin' care of, so how come every time you get blicked, you gotta carry this shit around?”
    • 2017, Jill Eisenstadt, From Rockaway:
      She practically falls down trying to stand. “Getting up too quick is like tin foil,” she says, and she grabs the table with both hands to steady herself. Whoa, Timmy thinks, this girl is blicked.

Etymology 2

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Verb

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blicked

  1. simple past and past participle of blick