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      • jacked up adjective (INCREASED) Add to word list including a lot of extra features or parts: I was going to eat the biggest and most jacked up burgers I could get my hands on. increased or higher than before: Jacked-up prices are forcing customers away from the restaurant.
      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/jacked-up
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  2. not thinking or behaving normally because of having taken drugs: He died while jacked up on amphetamines. We were so jacked up we didn't sleep for four nights. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Drunkenness & sobriety. alky. battered. beer goggles.

    • Jackdaw

      JACKDAW definition: 1. a black and grey bird of the crow...

    • Jacket Potatoes

      jacket potatoes definition: 1. plural of jacket potato UK 2....

  3. Jul 17, 2008 · I mainly hear "jacked up" in reference to being highly energized, usually by way of artificial means. My friends would say, "I couldn't sleep last night because I was all jacked up on coffee." I agree with Dimcl, "backed up" would make a lot more sense in context.

  4. Dec 16, 2016 · In some dialects, "jacked" or "jacked up" means "to have some injury or incapacity". For example, I could say something like: I woke up this morning and my neck was jacked up (my neck hurts).

  5. jack up in British English. verb (adverb) 1. (transitive) to increase ( prices, salaries, etc) 2. (transitive) to raise (an object, such as a car ,) with or as with a jack. 3. (intransitive) slang. to inject oneself with a drug, usually heroin. 4. (intransitive) Australian informal.

  6. To jack up the price or amount of something means to increase it to an unreasonable or unacceptable level. [ informal , disapproval ] The plan would cost so much that the company would have to jack up its prices.

  7. Jun 8, 2011 · Jacked up - not proper (question) Is “jacked up” American slang only, and not English, is it slang at all? Thank you

  8. Definition of jacked-up @pelangipelangi “jacked-up” means beaten or broken badly. It can also be used to say something is “messed up” Examples: That’s jacked up! The car got jacked up in the wreck.

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