Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Drunk or intoxicated.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective slang Completely
inebriated
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Nixon sacked Dalton on second down, then 11 seconds later, Kehl blitzed from the right side and Dalton had no chance.
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'' They blitzed from the weak side and Tiki (Barber) did a great job of picking up that block, '' Manning said.
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LSU blitzed from a couple different places, forcing Jason to throw it early, but he did a great job concentrating and hitting the receiver he wanted to.
USATODAY.com 2004
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LSU blitzed from a couple different places, forcing Jason to throw it early, but he did a great job concentrating and hitting the receiver he wanted to.
USATODAY.com 2004
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Bruschi created it when he blitzed from the right side, sacked Boller and jarred the ball loose.
USATODAY.com 2003
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If someone had blitzed from the right side, he'd have come free.
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Phone calls blitzed his morning and put him off-schedule.
American Tabloid Ellroy, James, 1948- 1995
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I landed on CNN and was 'blitzed' with a super fancy build-up to "The Presidential Scorecard: The First 100 Days".
The 100-Day Nonsense: Too Much Opinion, Not Enough News 2010
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I landed on CNN and was 'blitzed' with a super fancy build-up to "The Presidential Scorecard: The First 100 Days".
Jim Selman: The 100-Day Nonsense: Too Much Opinion, Not Enough News 2010
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I landed on CNN and was 'blitzed' with a super fancy build-up to "The Presidential Scorecard: The First 100 Days".
Jim Selman: The 100-Day Nonsense: Too Much Opinion, Not Enough News Jim Selman 2010
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