dingy 的定义
din·gi·er, din·gi·est.
- of a dark, dull, or dirty color or aspect; lacking brightness or freshness.
- shabby; dismal.
dingy 近义词
soiled, tacky
更多dingy例句
- Otherwise, he’s five-foot-seven, he walks around carrying a New Yorker tote, and his favorite jacket is a dingy yellow puffy he found in a box of free stuff.
- I walked past an elevator with a hand-drawn picture of three stick figures to show people it led to Ross, and a sign written in marker directing me to the dingy stairs.
- We spoke to some self-professed karaoke lovers about why they feel so passionately about these dingy bars, and what not singing together for over a year has meant for them.
- You need a whitening kit, I tell my teeth, which look dingy when I smile at a colleague’s joke.
- However, thousands of others, mostly impoverished women and children, trudge to dingy, crowded factories in cities such as New York and Los Angeles — and wherever there is concentrated cheap immigrant labor.
- He has a majestic view of the dingy back entrance of a Hilton hotel.
- On a cold, foggy night On Feb 26, 1998 I walked out a dingy hotel in handcuffs.
- Then I turned to the right and stopped before a dingy shop which bore the sign: HAWBERK, ARMOURER.
- That night, I dreamed of a square, three-story, concrete building that was dark and dingy with filth, dust, and cobwebs.
- When she came to power in 1978, Britain was a dreary, dreary place: dingy, funereal, abashed, scruffy, feckless.
- They were for the most part dingy, but as they were nearly always open it did not make so much difference.
- It was there also that she ate, keeping her belongings in a rare old buffet, dingy and battered from a hundred years of use.
- It is up a lot of very dingy back-staircases and down a lot of very dingy passages.
- He wore moccasins and buckskin leggings, and a dingy-blue flannel shirt, open at the throat.
- Those two spots 92 of colour against the dingy wood panels dressed up the desolation wonderfully.