cactused

Etymology
. Australian colloquialism may have originated as a result of the Australian prickly pear plague in the early 20th century, which overran farmland, making it unusable.

Adjective

 * 1) Featuring a cactus or cacti.
 * 2)  Broken; ruined; no longer working, more recently especially related to a technical system.
 * My computer is cactused.
 * 1) * 1986, Daryl Guppy, "Some Days Are Rocks", in A Bundle of Yarns (ed. Michael Kavanagh); quoted in Susan Butler, The Dinkum Dictionary, The Text Publishing Company (2009), ISBN 9781921351983, page 66:
 * His high spirits descended temporarily. 'It took me thirty minutes to get her going again. The lift pump is cactused.'
 * 1)  In trouble, screwed.
 * My computer is cactused.
 * 1) * 1986, Daryl Guppy, "Some Days Are Rocks", in A Bundle of Yarns (ed. Michael Kavanagh); quoted in Susan Butler, The Dinkum Dictionary, The Text Publishing Company (2009), ISBN 9781921351983, page 66:
 * His high spirits descended temporarily. 'It took me thirty minutes to get her going again. The lift pump is cactused.'
 * 1)  In trouble, screwed.
 * 1)  In trouble, screwed.
 * 1)  In trouble, screwed.
 * 1)  In trouble, screwed.

Synonyms

 * See also Thesaurus:out of order
 * See also Thesaurus:in trouble
 * See also Thesaurus:in trouble