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"whacked out" is not a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is too informal and slang-like for use in formal writing. Instead, you could use the phrase "out of control" in its place. Example sentence: The crowd became increasingly unruly and seemed out of control.
Exact(25)
Points of Entry THIS WEEK'S RECOMMENDATIONS POLITICALLY WHACKED OUT: The filmmaker Errol Morris classifies his movies as either "politically concerned" or "completely whacked out".
"I was pretty whacked out," he admits.
And you're usually just whacked out from worrying.
Just without the excuse of being all whacked out on psychedelic drugs.
"You've got Amar'e Stoudemire here and you've got Carmelo there and he's in the middle with the ball, you can get all whacked out," D'Antoni said.
"I started saving, then got whacked out with the divorces," he said last week from Florida, where he now lives in West Palm Beach.
Similar(35)
New stories and a novel about a whacked-out imaginary town during the Dust Bowl drought.
I made a plate of Spanish cheese and saffron crackers, just in case Jack was not completely whacked-out.
Sierra remembers being taken much too young to peyote ceremonies, where all the adults were completely whacked-out.
Gods of Egypt and its whacked-out (OK, borderline-incoherent) storyline is bursting with creativity and risk.
In the flesh, Lloyd sounds miles more Jim Ignatowski – his whacked-out cabbie in Taxi – than the exposition-rattling Doc.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com