scraggy
English
    
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈskɹæɡi/
- Audio (Southern England) - (file) 
- Rhymes: -æɡi
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, chapter 10, in The Trail of The Sword:- [H]e grasped the rock. It was scraggy, and though it tore and bruised him he clung to it.
 
 
- Lean or thin, scrawny.
- 1815 February 24, [Walter Scott], chapter 2, in Guy Mannering; or, The Astrologer. […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to III), Edinburgh: […] James Ballantyne and Co. for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, […]; and Archibald Constable and Co., […], →OCLC:- 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.
 
- 1912, Arthur Conan Doyle, The Lost World […], London, New York, N.Y.: Hodder and Stoughton, →OCLC:- He is twenty years younger, but has something of the same spare, scraggy physique.
 
 
Derived terms
    
Translations
    
References
    
- “scraggy”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.