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hangover

[ US /ˈhæˌŋoʊvɝ/ ]
[ UK /hˈæŋɡə‍ʊvɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. something that has survived from the past
    a holdover from the sixties
    hangovers from the 19th century
  2. an official who remains in office after his term
  3. 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.
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