Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of louse.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • It's not an easy book to read, even when you already have a pretty good idea how much human beings have loused up this planet.

    "No moon, no pale reflection." greygirlbeast 2010

  • It's not an easy book to read, even when you already have a pretty good idea how much human beings have loused up this planet.

    "No moon, no pale reflection." yuki_onna 2010

  • While Donovan was roaming the Balkans in February, Carter, who also thought U.S. intelligence was “loused up,” had convinced Roosevelt he needed a small, off-the-books operation for discreet spying that the White House could deny existed.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • While Donovan was roaming the Balkans in February, Carter, who also thought U.S. intelligence was “loused up,” had convinced Roosevelt he needed a small, off-the-books operation for discreet spying that the White House could deny existed.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • Cheers guv, can you now sort my CEDAR, DMS and CIS I seem to have loused them up as well on August 24, 2009 at 8: 39 pm Spartan Cop

    Kit Freak « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG Inspector Gadget 2009

  • This post has me wondering if anybody has ever seriously loused up a Bob, Larry, or junior cake.

    Rabbit Food 2010

  • Although the fact that I was shooting copper-coated fours when I missed didn't have a thing to do with my loused up shot, it did seem to me that the two birds I actually ended up collecting had less shot in them than I would have expected at 20-25 yards away.

    Confessions of a Turkey Misser 2008

  • A good article in the New York Times about how loused up we are.

    The Pain Wall Street, the SEC, and Hank Paulson Have Put Us In ... Steve Hulett 2009

  • If a woman refused to give up a kiss, the fellow “loused” or pinched her.

    Archive 2009-02-01 Joanna Waugh 2009

  • If a woman refused to give up a kiss, the fellow “loused” or pinched her.

    Kissing Friday and other British Easter Traditions Joanna Waugh 2009

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