scraggy
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
scraggy (comparative scraggier, superlative scraggiest)
- Rough and irregular; jagged.
- c. 1890 William Dean Howells, Tennyson, stanza 18:
- Her tender arms the angry sharpness rue
- Of many a scraggy thorn and envious brier;
- 1894, Gilbert Parker, The Trail of The Sword. ch. 10:
- [H]e grasped the rock. It was scraggy, and though it tore and bruised him he clung to it.
- c. 1890 William Dean Howells, Tennyson, stanza 18:
- Lean or thin, scrawny.
- 1815, Sir Walter Scott, Guy Mannering, ch. 2:
- On one of these occasions, he presented for the first time to Mannering his tall, gaunt, awkward, bony figure, attired in a threadbare suit of black, with a coloured handkerchief, not over clean, about his sinewy, scraggy neck.
- 1815, Sir Walter Scott, Guy Mannering, ch. 2:
Derived terms
Translations
very lean
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References
- “scraggy”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.