[
US
/ˈhæˌŋoʊvɝ/
]
[ UK /hˈæŋɡəʊvɐ/ ]
[ UK /hˈæŋɡəʊvɐ/ ]
NOUN
-
something that has survived from the past
a holdover from the sixties
hangovers from the 19th century - an official who remains in office after his term
- disagreeable aftereffects from the use of drugs (especially alcohol)
How To Use hangover In A Sentence
- Elsewhere during the Hangover technology beanfeast, we understand that HP's own demo of Bluetooth was similarly rotten.
- As I struggled along with a horror hangover, she effortlessly breezed around the park. The Sun
- But she is determined to get through it and sees the case as a hangover from her past. The Sun
- From the sounds downstairs, my mother was trying to recover from last night's hangover and put on a decent dress for her daughters' weddings.
- It mostly sucked because right as I rolled out of bed my stomach revolted and well I yakked everywhere … then the hangover came after the nausea. Think Progress » Beck loses 103 sponsors as his UK television broadcast runs for five days straight without any ads.
- It's hard to say whether this is a hangover from the breakdown or just his incredible nervous energy finding an outlet.
- Waking up to that news must certainly make a hangover feel better. The Sun
- It feels like a hangover, kind of buzzy and awful. 4/15/02 I had a tooth
- Seeing the disaster zone in the cold light of day can be enough to speed a headache to a full-blown hangover.
- After the prize-giving, the festivities begin again and the dancing goes on well into the next morning until hangovers, prudence and normal life kick in.