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jagged

/jag-id/US // ˈdʒæg ɪd //UK // (ˈdʒæɡɪd) //

锯齿状,参差不齐,参差不齐的,锯齿形

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : having ragged notches, points, or teeth; zigzag: the jagged edge of a saw; a jagged wound.
    • : having a harsh, rough, or uneven quality.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The first time came when my mom was visiting from Texas and, with her guidance, I created a few jagged hems on dresses I mostly wore at home.

  • At the top of the mountain, with views of the valley floor against the backdrop of the jagged Tetons, everyone breathed a bit easier.

  • This remote corner of northern Washington looks like Switzerland, with its jagged, snowy peaks.

  • At 13,000 feet, they reached the final leg, where they would climb out of a narrow corridor and onto the jagged ridge.

  • Rather than jagged lines and aggressive arrows, she came up with a circle inside another circle.

  • Their jagged edges and razor sharp teeth make you stand a little further back then normal.

  • Picasso worked from the photograph to create the blocked, jagged shapes he painted on canvas.

  • Jagged walls of rock, a palette of blacks and greys, loom over us.

  • The landscape is immense—rivers, hills, flatlands, jagged mountains.

  • Situated at 5,400 feet, it's encircled by jagged peaks that make you feel you're cupped inside a caldera.

  • The jagged top and spurs of San Jacinto Mountain shone like the turrets and posterns of a citadel built of rubies.

  • They stopped, leaning over a jagged fence made of sea-drift, to ask for water.

  • There was no water in the ravine, but the rocks were jagged and sharp, and they had to use much care to save their tires.

  • Thickets were swept as with a great jagged scythe by the leaden hail which swept through them.

  • One last effort—and he was out of the forest; the jagged summit still towered above him, but he could look forth—on what a view!