tumbledown
Appearance
See also: tumble down
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Deverbal from tumble down.
Adjective
[edit]tumbledown (comparative more tumbledown, superlative most tumbledown)
- In disrepair; poorly maintained.
- They lived in a tumbledown shack on the edge of the woods.
- 1897, Richard Marsh, The Beetle:
- The cab pulled up in front of a tumbledown cheap ‘villa’ in an unfinished cheap neighbourhood, — the whole place a living monument of the defeat of the speculative builder.
- 1955 January, R. S. McNaught, “From the Severn to the Mersey by Great Western”, in Railway Magazine, page 19:
- Some distance north of both stations was a rather small and tumbledown shed for Great Central engines, and there was generally one or more goods tank engines outside it, painted black and lined out in red.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]in disrepair, poorly maintained
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