Gloomy first. Slang of drug addicts: what relatives of addicts should know

The meaning of the word FROWS in Efremova’s Explanatory Dictionary

FROWNING

Hm at ry

adj.

1) Correlative in meaning. with noun: a frown associated with it.

2) a) Cloudy, gloomy, stormy (about the weather).

b) transfer decomposition Depressing, joyless (about mood, state).

3) transfer Frowning, gloomy, gloomy (about a person).

Efremova. Ephraim's explanatory dictionary. 2012

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what FROWS in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • FROWNING V Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , -th, ooe; gloomy. 1. Gloomy, frowning. X. old man. Gloomily (adv.) to look. 2. Rainy, gloomy. X. day. 11 nouns gloominess...
  • FROWNING in the Complete Accented Paradigm according to Zaliznyak:
    khmu"ry, khmu"paradise, khmu"roe, khmu"rye, khmu"ry, khmu"swarm, khmu"ry, khmur"rykh, khmu"rum, khmu"swarm, khmu"rum, khmu"rym, khmu" ry, khmu"ruyu, khmu"swarm, khmu"rye, khmu"ry, khmu"ruyu, khmu"swarm, khmu"rykh, ...
  • FROWNING in the Popular Explanatory Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    -aya, -oe; gloomy, gloomy, hmmy 1) Frowning, gloomy, gloomy. Gloomy man. He is always gloomy, always gloomy, always dissatisfied (Garshin...
  • FROWNING in Abramov's Dictionary of Synonyms:
    see angry, angry, ...
  • FROWNING in the Russian Synonyms dictionary:
    sunless, gloomy, frowning, frowning, ruffled, uncheerful, unsociable, unbearable, stormy, bad weather, unfriendly, unsmiling, gloomy, lean, gray, gloomy, dull, gloomy, ...
  • FROWNING
    adj. 1) Correlative in meaning. with noun: a frown associated with it. 2) a) Cloudy, gloomy, stormy (about the weather). b) transfer ...
  • FROWNING full spelling dictionary Russian language.
  • FROWNING in the Spelling Dictionary.
  • FROWNING in Ozhegov’s Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    gloomy, frowning old man. Gloomily (adv.) to look. gloomy, stormy, gloomy X. ...
  • FROWNING in Ushakov’s Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    (gloomy obsolete), gloomy, gloomy; gloomy, gloomy, gloomy (as short forms also used gloomy, gloomy, gloomy). Stern, gloomy, frowning. Face …
  • FROWNING in the New Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
    adj. 1. ratio with noun gloominess associated with it 2. Cloudy, gloomy, stormy (about the weather). Ott. trans. decomposition Depressing, joyless...
  • FROWNING in the Bolshoi Modern explanatory dictionary Russian language:
    adj. 1. Gloomy, gloomy, frowning (about a person). 2. transfer decomposition Depressing, joyless (about mood, state) ...
  • V Best translations Omar Khayyam, rubaiyat:
    Life is fading, sadly light, It will crumble from the first push. Drink! A gloomy cloak is torn in the sky by the moon. Drink! After U.S - …
  • DAY in Miller's Dream Book, dream book and dream interpretation:
    If you dream about the day, your situation will noticeably improve. New ones are possible nice meeting you. However, a gloomy day promises losses and...
  • MAKURIN in the Encyclopedia of Russian surnames, secrets of origin and meanings:
  • MAKURIN in the Encyclopedia of Surnames:
    Without a dictionary of dialecticisms, it’s impossible to figure out the surname. Well, who knows today that makura was a name for a visually impaired, nearsighted person? Gloomy silent man, forever...
  • POOR in the Literary Encyclopedia:
    Demyan - pseudonym modern poet Efim Alekseevich Pridvorov. R. in the family of a peasant from the Kherson province, who served as a church watchman in Elizavetgrad. ...
  • JUNIUS, AUTHOR OF THE JUNIUS LETTERS in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    anonymous author of the famous "Letters of Yu." They appeared in the London magazine "Public Advertiser" in 1769-1771, at the height of the struggle for...
  • FRONT in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , -th, -oe; -en. Gloomy, frowning. N. species. Furrowed brows. II noun frown, and...
  • LEAN in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    [sn], -aya, -oe; -ten, -tna, -tno. 1. see post1. 2. full f. About food: consumed during fasting1, not meat, ...
  • CLOUDY in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , -th, -oe; -ren, -rna. 1. Gloomy and gloomy, foreshadowing rain.P. day. Overcast weather. Today it is cloudy (in the meaning of the story). 2. ...
  • EVENING in the Dictionary of epithets:
    1. Part of the day. About the weather conditions; about the color of the sky, the transparency of the air, the smell. Scarlet, crimson, crimson, windless, cloudless, windy, wet, ...
  • KHMURENKY in the New Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:

Sentences containing the word gloomy

  • And this gloomy one, introverted person is unpleasant to him.
  • At one of these ponds I often met a gloomy gardener in a torn robe.
  • He felt awkward walking next to the gloomy beekeeper.
  • They didn’t have to wait long: the old man was not slow in appearing: anxiety and bewilderment were clearly visible on his gloomy face.
  • The day came quickly, inhospitable and gloomy.
  • Miller waved his hand and, without listening to the gloomy officer, ran out of the hallway.
  • The cold morning didn't seem too gloomy.
  • This gloomy face with sunken cheeks bore the mark of the bitterness of a loser.
  • It was a gloomy autumn day, like deep twilight.
  • But what he said was enough to make the gloomy man cheer up.
  • The Queen circles around with a frown, full of despair glance.
  • Kitty opened the door and he came in, gloomy and unshaven.
  • A half-smile played on his lips, but suddenly a strong fist fell on the face of the gloomy Arab.
  • The primate's arrogant face remained sad and gloomy.
  • Mitya came out gloomy with anger and trying not to look at anyone.
  • The woman's face became completely unfriendly and gloomy, the glass flashed.
  • The glasses gave the young director a stern and even gloomy look.
  • But the old man did not answer me, looking behind me with a frown.
  • Abdula looked sick, and the three whites had a gloomy, gloomy look.
  • In front of her on the wall hung a miniature: a gray-haired, bearded old man with a gloomy face.
  • Shnyra is a gloomy, reserved guy, but he is not capable of meanness.
  • The morning was gloomy and foggy, as if it were mid-November, not early March.
  • He stood for a minute, overcoming doubts, then looked up with a frown.
  • It seemed to my wife that grandfather even cheered up, although his face was still the same gloomy.
  • He inhaled deeply the smell of children's bodies and walked away, darkened and gloomy.
  • To Anne he seemed like a huge, gloomy man, irritable and not fond of children.
  • Dima, gloomy and frowning, walked along the airfield with his hands in his trouser pockets.
  • The morning was gloomy and cool, matching the mood of the expedition members, who one by one got out of their tents.
  • Blucher is angry and gloomy, there are folds on his forehead, his eyes are hidden under his eyebrows.
  • Of course, he expected to see a gloomy, old uncle and decided to meet him with an equally gloomy look.

The drug addict tries in every possible way to hide his passion from others. He has to communicate with friends without his parents suspecting anything is wrong. He behaves quite thoughtfully in the family, with peers, with classmates.

However, a careful look allows you to notice changes. They appear in behavior and health. It is worth paying attention to the teenager’s speech. He quickly masters the slang of drug addicts, which should be known to relatives of addicts.

Seeing that his loved ones don’t understand what he’s talking about on the phone, he feels like a hero. However, the jargon used by drug addicts has been studied. Their translation is known to doctors and psychologists. Some frequently used words and phrases are to be recognized by the reader right now.

How does drug addict slang arise?

For long period Slang for drug addicts was formed. It did not arise spontaneously. The emergence of their own jargon is due to the desire of addicts to feel cohesion. Any language unites a people, sets it apart from others, and allows it to remain individual.

Drug addicts often get together. They communicate and make contact at discos, parties, apartments, and hostels. Talking about their own things, young people create a unique language that is understandable to them and inaccessible to others.

Drug addict jargon is widely used between addicts in everyday life. They resort to it when communicating on forums, where they offer to purchase goods in a veiled form. Using common words, phrases with an unusual meaning, addicts easily recognize their brothers. However, relatives, listening to phone conversations and intimate conversations between two friends, do not notice anything suspicious.

Each group of drug addicts using a particular substance uses slang words accepted in their circle. Persons who have chosen, which includes ephedrone, and, taking the next dose of the drug, will certainly pronounce the usual terms: sniff, bump, kick, splash, hurt.

Slang words were invented by drug addicts to name psychostimulants.

The most common words replacing pervitin:

  • brew;
  • oil;
  • screw;
  • bolt;
  • speed;
  • screw;
  • force.

Ephedrone is called completely differently:

  1. mulk;
  2. liquid gunpowder;
  3. talker;
  4. martz;
  5. chicken;
  6. crystal;
  7. tramp.

The formation of drug addict slang is influenced by two significant factors:

Age of addicts

How younger drug addicts, the more words with diminutive suffixes present in their vocabulary.

Over time, familiar words are replaced, and slang words are added: stomper - drug addicts excited after taking the drug, cuckoo - young consumer narcotic drugs, bugs – side effects that have arisen.

Among seasoned businessmen you will hear completely different names: kumar, merchant, little one, metro, overdose, feat. They have a completely different meaning than what is stated in the explanatory dictionary.

Terrain

Jargons are often formed within a small region. The same drug can have completely different names.

Linguists studying drug slang have concluded that more than a dozen different names y .

Among addicts, he is called Sultan, gloomy, geych, gera, white, elephant, cartoon, shit, oblique, Gertrude, picker, slaughter bread, horse, dope.

Parents are unlikely to understand that they are talking about drugs when teenagers use the words white, pepper, black, sad when talking, although this is the same name for heroin.

The speech of a person striving to learn and learn new things is constantly enriched. When degraded, it becomes scarce, but unusual meanings in familiar words.

Examples of drug addict jargon

Drug addict slang is non-standard vocabulary. It is not obscene, but its use is typical to achieve certain goals.

Drug addicts often insert specific words into their speech to attract attention. I want to seem cool, stylish, cheeky.

Words that hurt the ear come to the rescue:

  • bulbulator;
  • aklaha;
  • doznyak;
  • planokisha;
  • leather jacket;
  • wheel and others.

Almost every word did not appear thoughtlessly. However, sometimes the transfer from one name to another occurs very conditionally, which makes it difficult for others to understand the language. Drug addicts get another high from this.

Many examples can be given when a familiar word or phrase is used by drug addicts in a completely different direction:

  1. relax - relax;
  2. vegetable garden – illegal cultivation of cannabis;
  3. zero - unused needle;
  4. swallow wheels - take a large dose of pills;
  5. medal - the appearance of a bruise after the injection;
  6. shovel - an ordinary spoon for stirring a narcotic potion;
  7. control - presence of blood in the syringe;
  8. inhalation – smoking cigarettes containing marijuana;
  9. hole - visible trace, left on the skin by a needle from an injection;
  10. mycelium - a country house where drug addicts gather.

The list is endless, so there are dictionaries that explain the meaning of these terms. There you can find out what a check is in drug addict slang.

It turns out that this is not a document confirming the purchase at all, but a bundle of paper or foil into which 0.1 g of pure heroin is poured.

Most used expressions, slang words and translation

You come across the use of jargons preferred by amateurs and others in everyday life.

Cabbage in drug addict slang refers to finely chopped unripe green poppy heads. Other juicy words related to this topic are presented in the table:

Often similar expressions sound in films that talk about the peculiarities of the subculture.

Bayan in slang for drug addicts does not mean musical instrument. They call it a syringe that holds 5 ml medicine. A dictionary of terms has been compiled to name devices used by drug addicts.

Addicts use a number of synonyms to name each drug they use. Nut is drug addict slang for cocaine.

It is also called frost, snow, coconut, kicker, ice, tse, coke, snowball, si, marafet. You can consider the names of other drugs used in speech just as often.

Conclusion

Having studied the names, it becomes clear that gloomy in the slang of drug addicts does not mean a person’s mood, but the usual addictive one.

Studying slang helps to understand a drug addict and prevent the development of addiction.

And even if not everyone knows what mustard, gerf or path mean in the jargon of drug addicts, but, having heard such words in an incomprehensible context, it is worth thinking about what lies behind what was said.