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bedraggled
Wet and limp; unkempt.
π¬ Quotations
A low rumbling sound was heard; a subterraneous hum; and then all held their breaths; as bedraggled with trailing ropes, and harpoons, and lances, a vast form shot lengthwise, but obliquely from the sea.
She came at night, and in a storm, with only two attendants, and stood before a peasantβs hut, tired, bedraggled, soaked with rain, βthe red print of her lost crown still girdling her brow,β and implored admittanceβand was refused!
No three tramps that one could have met in a Surrey lane could have looked more hopeless and bedraggled.
As a rule he was neat in his person, but now his clothes were in disorder. He looked suddenly bedraggled. I was convinced he had been drinking, and I smiled.
Decaying, decrepit or dilapidated.
π¬ Quotations
She is only coming to gloat over my bedraggled and flowerless borders and to sing the praises of her own detestably over-cultivated garden. I'm sick of being told that it's the envy of the neighbourhood; it's like everything else that belongs to herβher car, her dinner-parties, even her headaches, they are all superlative; no one else ever had anything like them.
It was a tall, shabby building, that cannot have been painted for years, and it had so bedraggled an air that the houses on each side of it looked neat and clean.
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