budgy
English
editEtymology
editFrom budge + -y, from budge (“strong drink”).
Adjective
editbudgy (comparative more budgy, superlative most budgy)
- (obsolete, slang, rare) Drunk.
- 1876, The Shamrock, volume 14:
- Well, Guv'nor, he stood up by-and-by, and taking the bundles of rags, the big uns in one hand, tother ones in tother, he toddled out of the room; stopped a moment at the bar to have a last tot […] and then I heard the spring-door slap after him.
[…] So I tucked my violin under my arm, and sallied out after the old budgy ragman, determined to ease him of his load at the very first lonesome corner I could track him to.