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11 old-timey words for 'hangover' we need to bring back

This crapulous bottle-ache will be the death of me.
Jan 1st 2015, 1:00 PM 44,024 10

SOMETIMES THE OLD words are the best words.

Instead of being in bits, why not suffer from one of these venerable ailments? Illustrated with owls:

1. Crapulence

Source: pinkiwinkitinki

An excellent word from the 1530s. Also: crapulous; crapulously; crapulousness.

2. Bottle-ache

Source: Life Lenses

Used from the mid-19th to the early 20th century.

3. Carpenters in the forehead

Source: rexboggs5

Danish slang.

4. Katzenjammer

Source: Az-Jean

Nineteenth-century American slang, from the German for ‘wailing cats’.

5. Bust-head

Source: jurvetson

Extremely descriptive American slang.

6. Wooden mouth

Source: Invvigren

French slang.

7. The zings

Source: Forest & Kim

American, from a 1967 dictionary.

8. Cropsick

Source: Flickr

“Sick from excess in eating or drinking”, 1913.

9. Hair-ache

Source: RobertSteele

Old French slang, now out of use.

10. Gallon distemper

Source: Base Camp Baker

Noted in 1905.

11. Blue devils

Source: Bass Embrace

Feeling bad about yourself after drinking too much. Noted in 1823.

Owl photos inspired by Hungover Owls

More: 12 distinctly Irish ways to describe your hangover>

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Michael Freeman

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