squiffy

[ UK /skwˈɪfi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. very drunk
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How To Use squiffy In A Sentence

  • Not only is she the great-granddaughter of Herbert Asquith, the Prime Minister whose drinking habits earned him the name 'squiffy', she is also the grandniece of British filmmaker Anthony California Chronicle
  • Radcliffe has recalled having to guide a presumably squiffy Richard Harris through lines the actor couldn't recall. Harry Potter and the A-Z of magic
  • As if we're all going to sit around and say things like "squiffy," tosser "or" wanker "- although we can think of a few who deserve that last moniker. Beaumont Enterprise Blogs
  • It's good to see that Gandalf has his human side, and gets squiffy at a post-Oscars party.
  • Whereas cocodamol are great for sending a person squiffy in the head, they're pretty useless for relieving agonising back pain.
  • While we're of the subject of goats…… I have a friend who once got so squiffy at a party she signed up for a twelve week goat keeping course.
  • So we came from what was once Middlesex before the Greater London Council claimed London Boroughs that far out (forgive me if my history is a bit squiffy there.)
  • It started shortly after the upgrade when the font menu started going squiffy in certain applications. My fonts are in a mess and i want to kill myself « We Don't Count Your Own Visits To Your Blog
  • ‘It was another one of those days for Tiger: lots of good shots and one or two squiffy drives,’ said Brown.
  • In a trippy opening sequence we learn that Atkins is a good-time girl, all mascara and champagne and arguing violently with her squiffy actor boyfriend.
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