14 July 2018
blotto
[blot-oh]
adjective, Slang.
1. very drunk; so drunk as to be unconscious or not know what one is doing.
Origin of blotto
1915-1920; blot1(v.) + -o
Dictionary.com
Examples from the Web for blotto
Historical Examples
We ceased to think there was any harm in being occasionally “blotto” at night, or in employing the picturesque army word “bloody.”
Tell England
Ernest Raymond
Today’s quote
All you need is the plan, the road map, and the courage to press on to your destination.
– Earl Nightingale
On this day
14 July 1789 – Bastille Day – commemorating the storming of the Bastille, a fortress-prison. Parisians feared being attacked by King Louis XVI following an economic meltdown and subsequent breakdown in communication between the royalty and the Third Estate (representing the common people and which formed the National Guard represented by the colours of red, white and blue). The Bastille represented the brutality of the monarchy, although at the time it was attacked it only held seven prisoners. The storming of the Bastille led to the French Revolution, bringing an end to feudalism and the proclamation of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which was influenced the US President Thomas Jefferson and declared the universal right of freedom for every person.
14 July 1881 – death (?) of William H. Bonney aka Billy ‘The Kid’. American outlaw. Legend has it that he killed 21 men, although historians believe it may have been between 4 and 9 men. He was shot dead by Sheriff Pat Garrett around 14 July 1881. Some conspiracy theorists believe that Bonney did not get shot that day, but that Garrett staged the shooting so that Billy ‘The Kid’ could escape. Born 23 November 1859.