drunkover

English

Etymology

Blend of drunk + hangover

Adjective

drunkover (comparative more drunkover, superlative most drunkover)

  1. Having a hangover while drunk.
    • 2020 November 24, David Nickle, Monstrous Affections: Stories, Open Road Media, →ISBN:
      We aren't talking now. I'm drunk and hungover, or drunkover. Landscape inside and outside the car glows monochrome. John concentrates on the dark road. His glasses are shimmering circles of cold white fire.
    • 2021 February 28, Josh Lanyon, Mystery at the Masquerade: An M/M Cozy Mystery, volume 3, JustJoshin Publishing, Inc., →ISBN:
      “If you're okay here on your own, I think I'm going to head home and get some sleep. I'm still feeling a little...” “Seedy?” Nora supplied. “Drunkover? “I was going to say under the weather.” “Don't you worry.” Nora beamed at him. “Everything is under control here.
    • 2021 April 13, Angie Abdou, “Four”, in This One Wild Life: A Mother-Daughter Wilderness Memoir, ECW Press, →ISBN:
      “He was pretty lunched the night before.” “Yep. He had a full-throttle drunkover.” “Drunkover!” All five of them laugh. “Fuck. Been there.” Ollie and Katie catch our eyes at the swear word, as if they're getting away with something just by hearing the curse.
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