Green’s Dictionary of Slang

flawed adj.

1. drunk.

[UK]Eighth Liberal Science n.p.: No man must call a Good-fellow Drunkard [...] But if at any time they spie that defect in another, they may without any forfeit or just exceptions taken, say, He is Foxt, He is Flaw’d, He is Fluster’d [etc.].
[Ire]Head Canting Academy (2nd edn) n.p.: No man ought to call a Good-fellow a Drunkard; but [...] he may without a forfeit say he is [...] flaw’d.
[UK]B.E. Dict. Canting Crew n.p.: Flaw’d c. Drunk.
[UK] ‘The Art of Drinking’ in Wit’s Cabinet 138: He is flaw’d.
[UK]New Canting Dict. [as cit. c.1698].
[UK]Bailey Universal Etym. Eng. Dict. [as cit. c.1698].
[UK]Grose Classical Dict. of the Vulgar Tongue n.p.: Flawd, drunk.
[UK]Lex. Balatronicum [as cit. 1785].
[UK]Egan Grose’s Classical Dict. of the Vulgar Tongue.
[US]Matsell Vocabulum.

2. (US) bad-tempered.

[US]Matsell Vocabulum.

3. (US) not wholly honest (but not actually criminal).

[US]Matsell Vocabulum.

4. of a woman, deflowered but still unmarried.

[UK]Farmer & Henley Sl. and Its Analogues.