释义 |
▪ I. ˈcabbaged, ppl. a.1 [f. cabbage v.1 (or n.1) + -ed.] Grown cabbage-fashion, formed into or having a head like a cabbage.
1577B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. (1586) 25 Cabegged rape sowen after rie. 1616Surfl. & Markh. Countr. Farm 167 The cabbaged Lettuce. 1656W. Dugard Gate Lat. Unl. §88. 29 Colewort, which..becometh cabbaged. 1725Bradley Fam. Dict. II. s.v. May, If any of the Imperial Lettices are cabbaged. ▪ II. ˈcabbaged, ppl. a.2 [f. cabbage v.2] Pilfered, as shreds by a tailor.
1729Coffey Beggar's Wed. i. i, I shall convert his cabbaged shreads into a stone Doublet. ▪ III. cabbaged, a.3 Brit. slang. Brit. |ˈkabɪdʒd|, U.S. |ˈkæbɪdʒd| [‹ cabbage n.1 + -ed suffix2.] Incapacitated by drugs or alcohol (or their after-effects); extremely intoxicated. Cf. cabbage n.1 1d.
1991Independent 23 Dec. 5/2 A minority get ‘cabbaged’ by taking between three and six tablets—a process known as ‘stacking’. 1994Observer (Nexis) 23 Oct. 38 No end of them have been busted for dealing and locked up and others are messed up with cabbaged heads. 1997M. Collin & J. Godfrey Altered State viii. 283 The influx of MDA ‘Snowballs’ resulted in squatting rows of cabbaged clubbers clinging desperately onto walls. 2001Bizarre July 36/1 What we want is some photographic evidence of your most catastrophically cabbaged moments. Bleary-eyed pics of you passed out amid tortillas—you know the score. |