tired and emotional
English
Etymology
First used by the British satirical magazine Private Eye in 1967, in a spoof diplomatic memo to describe the state of cabinet minister George Brown. It is now used as a stock phrase and euphemism to avoid litigation for libel, and the phrase has spread well beyond the magazine.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Adjective
tired and emotional (comparative more tired and emotional, superlative most tired and emotional)
- (British, humorous, idiomatic, euphemistic) Drunk.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:drunk
- 2011 December 8, Tim Adams, “Public Enemies by Michel Houellebecq and Bernard-Henri Lévy – review”, in The Guardian:
- In 2008, after what you imagine was a tired and emotional dinner, the novelist Michel Houellebecq and the philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy determined to start writing to each other about the things that kept them awake at nights.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see tired, emotional.
- 2016 August 15, Kevin Mitchell, “No respite for drained Andy Murray after claiming historic Olympic tennis gold”, in The Guardian, retrieved 2021-08-05:
- Andy Murray was tired and emotional – in the old fashioned sense – after becoming the first player in the history of tennis at the Olympics to win back-to-back gold medals in Rio on Sunday night.
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