loaded
verbEtymology
Definitions
simple past and past participle of load
Burdened by some heavy load
Burdened by some heavy load; packed.
- Let’s leave the TV; the car is loaded already.
- With regard to France and Holland, therefore, I muſt think, Sir, and it has always been the general Opinion, that the Subjects of each are more loaded and more oppreſſed with Taxes and Exciſes than the People of this Kingdom ;
- […]the fever began to assume a low type ; the tongue became loaded with a thick brown crust ;[…].
Having a live round of ammunition in the chamber.
- No funny business; this heater’s loaded!
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Possessing great wealth.
- He sold his business a couple of years ago and is just loaded.
- She told me that her Dad was loaded / I said “In that case, I’ll have rum and coca-cola”
- Is he loaded? “Yeah!” How much is he worth? “I don’t know, but I could probably never be poor again. When I see stuff in the paper like, ‘Oh, he’s worth £20m quid’, I ain’t worth that much. I don’t know what I’ve done with my money. […]”
Drunk.
- ‘Well, I’m loaded right now and I can’t remember where it is right now, tiny country . . . in the west?’
- By the end of the evening, the guests in the club were really loaded.
Pertaining to a situation where there is a runner at each of the three bases.
- It's bottom of the ninth, the bases are loaded and there are two outs.
Of a die or dice
Of a die or dice: weighted asymmetrically, and so biased to produce predictable throws.
- He was playing with loaded dice and won a fortune.
- They played awhile to Corinius’s great content, for at every throw he won and the other’s purse waxed light. But at this eleventh stanza the son of Corund cried out that the dice of Corinius were loaded.
- The more we invest in a sexual encounter in a particular person, the more loaded the dice in a dating game that we are forever reminded we must play to win.
Designed to produce a predictable answer, or to lay a trap.
- That interviewer is tricky; he asks loaded questions.
Having strong connotations that colour the literal meaning and are likely to provoke an…
Having strong connotations that colour the literal meaning and are likely to provoke an emotional response. Sometimes used loosely to describe a word that simply has many different meanings.
- "Ignorant" is a loaded word, often implying lack of intelligence rather than just lack of knowledge.
- The more loaded phrase is the middle one, "she slit his gullet," since it captures a sense of crudeness and suddenness that the other two do not.
Equipped with numerous options.
- She went all out; her new car is loaded.
Covered with a topping or toppings
Covered with a topping or toppings; especially, covered with all available toppings that are offered as options for the dish.
- loaded fries
- loaded potato wedges
Weighted with lead or similar.
- a loaded cane or whip
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at loaded. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at loaded. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
8 hops · closes at loaded
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA