haggard 的 2 个定义
- having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops.
- Archaic. wild; wild-looking: haggard eyes.
- Falconry. untamed.
- Falconry. a wild or untamed hawk caught after it has assumed adult plumage.
haggard 近义词
worn, weakened
更多haggard例句
- As the slow rescue effort dragged on, haggard emergency workers, who have been toiling in 12-hour shifts, stopped by to pause by the memorial wall for a moment, arms crossed.
- She was 14 years old and running around with all those old haggard cowboys, like Merle and Willie Nelson and all of them.
- He took the techniques of H. Rider Haggard and Jules Verne and brought them into the 20th century.
- Next day, DSK was perp-walking his way, haggard and grizzled, into infamy.
- Now you can summon them instantly on your screen, and track their new life post-you… Is he looking older, more haggard?
- Or of the fact that Haggard was a Hillary supporter and wrote a song endorsing her candidacy?
- Looking haggard and ridiculous—this “Amanda Bynes or Gandalf?”
- It was with a feeling of relief on both sides that the arrival of Mr. Haggard, of the Home Office, was announced.
- His lordship retired shortly to his study, Hetton and Mr. Haggard betook themselves to the billiard-room.
- But we must not class in this unclean category Lord Spunyarn and his friend Haggard, who were both playing at the big table.
- Haggard merely played for the excitement, and Spunyarn because it was a lesser bore to play than to look on.
- Three more coups are played, each of which the banker, that is to say Haggard, wins.