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Discover LudwigThe phrase "to be plastered" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in informal contexts to describe someone who is very drunk. Example: "After a few rounds at the bar, he was completely plastered and could barely stand."
Exact(35)
The eaves have to be plastered".
Its messages had to be plastered on roadside billboards.
Your face is going to be plastered over every candidate board in Tokyo.
"All governments lie," Stone's maxim, ought to be plastered across every journalist's desk.
Most famously, Pierre Cardin sold his name to be plastered on everything, including cigarette lighters.
The rest of the room has had to be plastered with notices to prevent it being daubed with unintentional graffiti.
Similar(25)
Grainne Meyer says: "One player had gone from not having a single logo on his clothes a few years ago, to being plastered with them.
The media frenzy surrounding his story was intense; he went from only being known among underground hip-hop fans to being plastered across the pages of nearly every newspaper and celebrity gossip magazine.
ASHKELON, Israel — To the naked eye, the white, powdery substance appeared to be plaster.
To the 1913 organizers' disappointment, many of the sculptural pieces in the original exhibit had to be plaster casts since it was too expensive to ship and insure bronze and marble pieces.
The news seems to (annoyingly) be plastered on every site I look at.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com