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"raggedly" Definitions
  1. in old or torn clothes synonym shabbily
  2. in a way that is not smooth or that lacks control
  3. in a way that has an outline, an edge or a surface that is not straight or even

26 Sentences With "raggedly"

How to use raggedly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "raggedly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "raggedly". Mastering all the usages of "raggedly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Jane Doe's skin had been cut raggedly around the front of her neck.
In this portrait, we find him an old man, in utter isolation, gray-haired, raggedly dressed, barefoot in a motorized wheelchair.
Built in the 1940s and '50s, the collection of buildings had been expanded raggedly through the '70s, then abandoned 20 years ago.
He tells Brienne raggedly that he has to return to Cersei because "she's hateful — and so am I." But what does that mean?
The movie version isn't bad (Meryl Streep is great in it, and the cinematography is pre-Oscar Emmanuel Lubezki), but the story is left raggedly unfinished.
As the performers in the endearingly amateur "Little Mermaid"-style musical pageant now at the Wild Project warble (a tad raggedly), imperfection and uncertainty are everywhere.
Gobright, who died Wednesday after a fall during a descent in Mexico, was a self-described dirtbag, the fading term of endearment for climbers who live simply, and raggedly, for the single pursuit of climbing.
Sometimes the attitude has overshadowed the music, which is a shame, because the music—drawing equally from the speed and hate of Discharge and the pathos of American soul and early R&B—is raggedly spectacular.
Her body thrashes, panics, claws, makes noises, the backwards noises are just as unbearable, she stops making those noises, she raises up onto her knees, breathes raggedly, breathes, she loosens the noose, removes the noose, stands, unknots the noose.
It tore you up when Martha, reduced to calling from a pay phone in Rock Creek Park, raggedly, grievingly told Philip, "You left me with a stranger," and it happened again when he took the risk of telling her that he couldn't come to Moscow with her.
Wry lyrics, sung sweetly (by Katie Von Schleicher) and Zimmerman-esque raggedly (by band leader Gabriel Birnbaum), that are buoyed by CCR grit and lurch, with enough no-wave sax/Television guitar touches to make sure the band'll get beat up when it gets past Cleveland.
Still, despite its depressing subterranean breakfast buffet, the Ambasciatori retains a faded elegance that makes it easy to imagine the looks of disdain Williams recalls receiving when, on his second night in the city, he brought home a raggedly dressed Roman teenager whom he calls "Raffaelo" in his memoirs.
Because she came of age in the raggedly vibrant East Village art scene of the 1980s, amid the ravages of AIDS — one of her younger sisters, Bebe, an actress in underground films, died from complications of the disease, as did her friend, the artist David Wojnarowicz — her work has often been interpreted through a political lens.
Deep and raggedly they drove, impelled by the brief flash of power that upbore their owner.
James "Blood" Ulmer (born February 8, 1940) is an American jazz, free funk and blues guitarist and singer. Ulmer plays a Gibson Byrdland guitar. His guitar sound has been described as "jagged" and "stinging". His singing has been called "raggedly soulful".
A raggedly dressed man being bitten by a house guard dog. Etching by Thomas Lord Busby, ca. 1826. A guard dog or watchdog (not to be confused with an attack dog) is a dog used to guard property against, and watch for, unwanted or unexpected human or animal intruders. The dog is discerning so that it does not annoy or attack the house resident people.
He said the latter course only made the young criminals worse. In 1840, the Mission used the term "ragged" in its Annual Report to describe their establishment of five schools for 570 children. In the report, the Mission reported that their schools had been formed exclusively for children "raggedly clothed". The children only had very ragged clothes to wear and they rarely had shoes.
A penniless, raggedly-clothed John Kessler arrived in Salem, Massachusetts on November 11, 1780. Having had no friend or contact in Salem, he learned that Captain Barry was captain of the 36 gun frigate Alliance docked in Boston. In spite of Kessler's shabby appearance, Barry recognized him immediately and gave him a hearty welcome. Desperately short of hands, Barry was as glad to see Kessler as he was glad to see Barry.
Saddles and lobes are typically deep, narrow necked, and raggedly embayed. The Placenticeratidae had their beginning in the Late Albian stage at the end of the Early Cretaceous, starting with Hypengonoceras. The type genus, Placenticeras, appears later and is known from the upper Santonian to the lower Campanian of the Upper Cretaceous. The family has the longest duration of the Hoplitaceae, extending well into the Maastrichtian, the final stage of the Cretaceous period with the genus Hoplitoplacenticeras.
50, No. 8. Govt. Print. In terms of body mass, two Puerto Rican males were found to average and two females averaged . Although claimed as the most sexually dimorphic subspecies by size, neither body mass nor linear dimensions seem to support this. This subspecies has less mottling than northern red-tails on the back, lacks the white tip at the end of the rectrices and, most characteristically, has a very broad, but raggedly edged, and black belly band.
Packaging that tears open raggedly or otherwise cannot readily be resealed is sometimes used to help indicate tampering. Often, multiple layers or redundant indicators are used because no single layer or device is "tamper-proof". Consideration should be given to unique custom indicators (which should be changed regularly because these are subject to counterfeiting). End-users and consumers need to be educated to watch for signs of tampering, both at the primary means of entrance and at secondary or "back door" locations on a package.
The Paris Post Office is located at 206 North Elm Street in downtown Paris, Arkansas. It is located in a modest Colonial Revival building, built in 1937 as part of a major federal building project. It is notable for the controversy over its interior artwork, which was funded by the Treasury Department's Treasury Section of Fine Arts, and executed by Joseph P. Vorst. The murals proposed by Vorst depicted a raggedly dressed African-American with several skinny mules, approaching a tarpaper shack that appears to be the man's home.
A mad scientist, a chemist named Professor Ernest Smalley, randomly chooses raggedly dressed vagrant Bill Dunn from a bread line and recruits him to participate in an experiment in exchange for "a real meal and a new suit". When Smalley's experimental potion grants Dunn telepathic powers, the man becomes intoxicated by his power and seeks to rule the world. This superpowered man uses these abilities for evil, only to discover that the potion's effects are temporary. Having killed the evil Smalley, who had intended to kill Dunn and give himself the same powers, Dunn cannot recreate the secret formula.
Other examples of Claxton's works were also reproduced in newspapers of the day. In Utopian Christmas, reproduced in the Illustrated London News of 24 December 1859, the poor - barefooted and raggedly-dressed - are shown feasting at a lavish banquet and being served and entertained by the rich - depicted as generals, nobles, and finely-dressed ladies. Other works by Claxton include Women's Work: A Medley (1861) and Scenes from the Life of a Governess (1863). Women's Work may have been a feminist riposte to Ford Madox Brown's painting Work, which focused on men's labors but neglected women.
Dutch depiction of the battle with a poem With a calm sea and a breeze from the north-east, Zoutman manoeuvred his line onto a port tack, heading south-east by east, and awaited Parker, who held the weather gage. The British fleet closed, raggedly at first due to the poor condition of some of the ships, into a line of battle abreast in accordance with the signal raised at 06:10. Two ships were told to change places, which led to a mistake and placed the Dolphin against one of the largest Dutch ships and the Bienfaisant without an opponent. When Parker raised the battle flag shortly before 08:00, for close action, the British fleet moved closer.
Creation Records had requested My Bloody Valentine to record a track for The Catalogue and coincidentally "right at the same time, Bill Carey, a friend [of the band] who worked in a studio said that anytime [they] wanted to mess around in a studio, [they] could, so [they] went in and made ["Sugar"] up." Originally released as a square 7-inch flexi disc, "Sugar" was later featured as the b-side on the 1992 French pressing of "Only Shallow". A remastered version was released on the compilation album EP's 1988–1991 (2012). Critics have described the song as "a drowsily sweet, raggedly swaying number" and "structurally pitched somewhere in between the sonic excesses of Isn't Anything and experimental passages on Loveless".

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