In some cases the animals are drugged to make them more compliant.
2
He ate it on the way home and felt drugged and dizzy.
3
Tests have been taken to determine whether she was drugged or stupefied.
4
It looks a bit like John; in fact, Vicky probably drugged it.
5
It was not fatigue that was mastering him; the wine was drugged.
1
Sin is the link between the doped cigarettes and the missing Kazmah.
2
Spherical carbon doped titanium dioxide nanoparticles are synthesized by the sol-gel process.
3
Covalent B-functionalization of B-doped graphene has been performed for the first time.
4
She would have to show him the way, doped up or not.
5
At such times the old blank, doped feeling fell across his mind.
1
She felt as though she were in a refuge from the world, and as though her conscience was being narcotised.
2
The leaves were in a narcotised condition, for on bits of meat being placed on two of them, there was no inflection in 3 hrs.
3
Behind the scenes, though... in abundant home videos, we see how her sprightly jokes (and Paula Abdul disses) spiral downwards into narcotised babbling.
1
Some eyes were still open, gazing with the narcotized stare of the ill.
2
The control group were narcotized using propofol, while the observation group were narcotized using etomidate.
3
Instead, they had drugged him, keeping him in a narcotized stupor for perhaps several days.
4
Some are stupid, mercifully narcotized that they may go to sleep without long tossing about.
5
Senility and infancy are by nature normally narcotized.
6
I'd been over narcotized, I suddenly knew.
7
They stumbled around the compartment in a narcotized trance while Alani's men herded them toward a shuttered hatch.
8
She made motions with her tongue as if she found her mouth excessively dry: she was not drunk but narcotized.
9
Harley says that the fakirs begin their performances by taking a large dose of the powerfully stupefying "bang," thus becoming narcotized.
10
His palate has become narcotized by the noxious weed, and he has lost, in a great measure, the delicate and enviable taste for fruits.
11
RICE-WATER, n. A mystic beverage secretly used by our most popular novelists and poets to regulate the imagination and narcotize the conscience.
12
Some eyes were still open, gazing with the narcotized stare of the ill.
13
The control group were narcotized using propofol, while the observation group were narcotized using etomidate.
14
Instead, they had drugged him, keeping him in a narcotized stupor for perhaps several days.
15
Some are stupid, mercifully narcotized that they may go to sleep without long tossing about.
16
Senility and infancy are by nature normally narcotized.