stoned
/stəʊnd/ (bre, ipa) · [stˈond] /stəʊnd/ (ame, ipa) · [stˈond] /ˈstōnd How to pronounce stoned (audio)/ (ame, mw)
stoned — 形容詞
- stonedpositive
- stonedercomparative
- stonedestsuperlative
1. high from marijuana or another drug, so your judgement and movements are not nor
嗨掉的
吸大麻等後神智失常
high from marijuana or another drug, so your judgement and movements are not normal
After two joints, Karim felt stoned and laughed at the same joke twice.
抽了兩根大麻菸後,Karim 嗨掉了,對同一個笑話笑了兩次。
feel stoned after smoking cannabis
By midnight, Meera looked stoned and forgot where she had parked.
到了半夜,Meera 看起來像是嗨掉了,連車停哪裡都忘了。
look stoned and forget simple things
The boys were too stoned to follow the film's story.
那群男孩嗨到連電影在演什麼都跟不上。
Hoa sounded stoned on the call and kept losing track of the point.
Hoa 在電話裡聽起來像嗨掉了,一直抓不住重點。
- high
very close in everyday speech and widely used for recreational drug effects
- drugged
broader and can suggest medicine, forced dosing, or a heavier impaired state
- intoxicated
more formal and often used in legal or medical contexts
- sober
not affected by alcohol or drugs
- clear-headed
emphasizes normal judgement and attention
文法句型
feel stoned
look stoned
get stoned
too stoned to + verb
用法筆記
Usually refers to a recreational drug high, especially from marijuana. It is common after be, feel, look, or sound, and it is more informal than drugged or intoxicated.
常見錯誤
2. having the hard seed taken out before the food is used or sold
去核的
果核已先去掉
having the hard seed taken out before the food is used or sold
The recipe asks for stoned dates, soft butter, and dark brown sugar.
這道食譜要用去核的椰棗、軟奶油和深色紅糖。
before noun: stoned dates
Amina packed stoned olives and bread for the train picnic.
Amina 為了火車野餐,帶了去核的橄欖和麵包。
collocation: stoned olives
The baker bought stoned cherries to save time before the festival.
那位麵包師傅買了去核的櫻桃,好在節慶前省點時間。
These stoned plums are ready to cook with ginger and honey.
這些去核的李子已經可以拿來和薑及蜂蜜一起煮了。
文法句型
stoned dates
stoned olives
stoned cherries
stoned plums
用法筆記
Mainly a food and recipe word, especially in British English. It is usually used before nouns like dates, olives, cherries, or plums, where the hard centre has already been taken out.