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whacked

[ wakt, hwakt ]

adjective

, Chiefly British Slang.
  1. exhausted; tired out.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of whacked1

First recorded in 1915–20; whack + -ed 2
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Example Sentences

To my surprise, they actually stayed up and kept my arms protected as I whacked scratchy shrubs for several hours.

Ohtani had been hitless against Scott until their most recent meeting, when he whacked the go-ahead single in the Dodgers’ division-clinching win.

The final episode of “Sopranos” notoriously ended with a shot of star James Gandolfini possibly, likely, about to get whacked — and then cut to black.

All of the comments above were regarding a play during Indiana’s 91-83 win over Chicago on Sunday in which Reese whacked Clark hard in the head while attempting to block a shot.

Gibson whacked eight fours in her explosive finish which helped England end the innings with confidence, setting Pakistan the challenge of their highest-ever T20 run chase.

From BBC

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whackwhacked-out