English

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Verb

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woozed

  1. simple past and past participle of wooze

Adjective

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woozed (comparative more woozed, superlative most woozed)

  1. Woozy.
    • 1897, The Phonographic Journal - Volume 4, page 81:
      Long months and years With sobs and tears, He sat, all woozed and whizzy, And his soul did flit As the 'phone box split With a last, long, wheezy “Busy!”
    • 1902, Clarence Louis Cullen, More ex-tank tales, page 35:
      All of my efforts to abandon Chicago had hitherto been conceived, planned and unsuccessfully executed while I was woozed, poetic, and therefore non-practical; my work had been gritty and minus the decisive clutch ;
    • 1907, Elbert Hubbard, The Philistine: A Periodical of Protest - Volume 25, page 185:
      A few weeks ago the editors of this land of the partially free and the home of the brave more or less, all grew woozed concerning the fate of Ouida.
    • 1999, The Leo & Antonia Gershanov Holocaust Arts & Writing Contest of the Holocaust Memorial Foundation of Illinois:
      I put a mask on that made me dizzy and woozed.