See also: zombied out

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

First attested in 1976; zombie +‎ -ed + out; compare the later verb zombie out (1981).

Adjective edit

zombied-out (not comparable)

  1. (informal) Like a zombie in being sluggish, numb, listless, and vacant.
    • 1976, Lester Grinspoon, James B. Bakalar, Cocaine, page 130:
      If you do a whole lot of it, you get sort of zombied out and you tend to stare at things.
    • 1979, Harvey W. Feldman, Michael Agar, George M. Beschner, editors, Angel Dust, page 87:
      Sometimes I would see them real mellow and the next minute they’d be all zombied out.
    • 1980, Tom Lorenz, Guys Like Us, page 34:
      As though he’d been passed out on the floor all these years or zombied out on weed like that idiot Ferd.
    • 1983, Mark Baker, Nam, page 79:
      Adrenaline junkies, zombied out on fear, working the assembly line on the nod, they shuffled about the business of the war factory.
    • 1984, Common Lives/Lesbian Lives, XI, page 33:
      I saw my friends go into a room, an hour later they’d be in the lounge acting crazy: sedate as wandering death, completely inarticulate and just zombied-out.
    • 1985, Zyzzyva, I, page 106:
      I’ve been kind’ve zombied out recently. You know, numb. I just drift around the house listening to piano music.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:zombied-out.