grubby 的定义
grub·bi·er, grub·bi·est.
- dirty; slovenly: children with grubby faces and sad eyes.
- infested with or affected by grubs or larvae.
- contemptible: grubby political tricks.
grubby 近义词
dirty, disheveled
更多grubby例句
- Tape and grips start out all sparkly clean but get grubby pretty quick.
- There were many volumes about precocious British tots with “nannies and pony carts,” she said, but none that would appeal to “grubby neighborhood kids” like the boy before her — or to the adventure-seeking girl she had once been.
- From the outside, VertiVegies looked like a handful of grubby shipping containers put side by side and drilled together.
- But Paltrow and Lively insist on deep meaning besides the grubby business of trade.
- Perfume bottles and weathered papyrus replicas gather dust in the grubby window displays of the empty shops.
- Most of all, how could anyone film—or inflict upon viewers—such gratuitous, relentlessly grubby sexual content?
- His friend to the north, Paul Kagame, is another authoritarian with grubby hands, feted nonetheless.
- Before the envelope containing salacious details makes it into the grubby hands of the media, tell everything.
- The cleaner-by-the-day will do the grubby things and I shall like it.
- (p. 107) It was a grubby farm with not much water, but we made the best of it, and settled down for the night.
- Open the bag, and turn the contents out in the lap of the dark-colored robe, grubby hands poking.
- Cross the Rockies to Vancouver, and you're back among dirty walls, grubby furniture, and inadequate literature again.
- It was some grubby affair that made me thank God for the sunlight.