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Trackered

The feeling of exhaustion engendered by the preparation of an extensive tracker report.
Preparing this tracker for Vodafone has left me totally trackered.
by Analeest May 18, 2011
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traggered

triggered and tragic both combined //
Bro this shit traggered

Or
Bro I’m traggered over this 😥
by Sleepyyhamsterr September 20, 2018
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Related Words

Twackered

The feeling one has when one has been awake for to long on a variety of substances, primarily ecstasy, cocaine, and/or crystal meth.
Dude I took my last E pill five hours ago and now I'm just straight twackered.
by Rellik Uzi August 14, 2010
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Ball-Tracker

A particularly useless person whose attempts to contribute in a group effort often hinders or doesn't contribute to the success of the group; ball-trackers fake work to get credit or to avoid of the consequences of doing nothing; originated as a pinball term when there are three people who all want to participate (one right flipper, one left, one ball-tracker who follows the ball with his finger)
"I'll be right flipper, James you're left, and Jacob, if you really wanna play you can be ball-tracker."
by gypsy disc March 23, 2016
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tuckered

exhausted, tired, finished, drained, tuckered out
After that long walk she was all tuckered out.
by aphrael October 4, 2005
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cream crackered

by dan September 2, 2004
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plumb tuckered out

Exhausted.

Origin:
It's no surprise that 'tuckered out' is an American phrase. No 'B-feature' western from the 1930s and 1940s was complete without Gabby Hayes being 'plumb tuckered out'. Hayes' contribution to the genre was celebrated by Mel Brooks in the 1974 film Blazing Saddles. In that, a look-alike actor played the part of Gabby Johnson, spouting 'authentic frontier gibberish' - "dad gum it, I am gonna die here an' no sidewindin bushwackin, hornswaglin, cracker croaker is gonna rouin me biscuit cutter".

An example is from the Wisconsin Enquirer, April 1839:
"I reckoned to have got to the tavern by sundown, but I haven't - as I'm prodigiously tuckered out."

'Plumb tuckered out' is somewhat later and the first example is from the Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette, February 1889: "They'll get plumb tuckered out waitin."

The actual derivation of this phrase is quite prosaic. 'Tucker' is a colloquial New England word, coined in the early 19th century, meaning 'to tire' or 'to become weary'. 'Tuckered out' is just a straightforward use of that. 'Plumb' is just an intensifier. 'Tuckered out' is rarely seen alone.
"I've been on my feet all day long, I'm plumb tuckered out!"
by CajunQueen August 18, 2009
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