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bedraggled

  • 1 enlodado

    • bedraggled

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > enlodado

  • 2 ensuciado

    • bedraggled

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > ensuciado

  • 3 desastrado

    • bedraggled
    • blowsy
    • blowzy
    • in quires
    • in raptures
    • ragged
    • scruffy
    • sloppy
    • wrestling match
    • wretchedly

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > desastrado

  • 4 manchado de barro

    • bedraggled
    • dirty with mud
    • stained with mud

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > manchado de barro

  • 5 desaliñado

    adj.
    untidy, messy, sloppy, bedraggled.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: desaliñar.
    * * *
    1→ link=desaliñar desaliñar
    1 untidy, unkempt, scruffy
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) (=descuidado) slovenly
    2) (=desordenado) untidy, dishevelled, disheveled (EEUU)
    3) (=negligente) careless, slovenly
    * * *
    - da adjetivo slovenly
    * * *
    = messy [messier -comp., messiest -sup.], scruffy [scruffier -comp., scuffiest -sup.], bedraggled, unkempt, scruff.
    Ex. The author discusses current attempts to organize electronic information objects in a world that is messy, volatile and uncontrolled.
    Ex. The article 'Surprise: Scruffy Students Now Don Glad Rags for Class' reports that high school students throughout the country are dressing up these days and that what is chic varies from region to region.
    Ex. This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.
    Ex. Modern tourists lack a classical training, and most of them are bewildered by such unkempt ruins as those that are found in Rome.
    Ex. Part of the reason he is such a scruff is he took on sponsorship to raise money for charity by agreeing to not have his beard or hair cut for the better part of a year.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo slovenly
    * * *
    = messy [messier -comp., messiest -sup.], scruffy [scruffier -comp., scuffiest -sup.], bedraggled, unkempt, scruff.

    Ex: The author discusses current attempts to organize electronic information objects in a world that is messy, volatile and uncontrolled.

    Ex: The article 'Surprise: Scruffy Students Now Don Glad Rags for Class' reports that high school students throughout the country are dressing up these days and that what is chic varies from region to region.
    Ex: This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.
    Ex: Modern tourists lack a classical training, and most of them are bewildered by such unkempt ruins as those that are found in Rome.
    Ex: Part of the reason he is such a scruff is he took on sponsorship to raise money for charity by agreeing to not have his beard or hair cut for the better part of a year.

    * * *
    slovenly
    * * *

    Del verbo desaliñar: ( conjugate desaliñar)

    desaliñado es:

    el participio

    desaliñado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    slovenly
    desaliñado,-a adjetivo scruffy, untidy

    ' desaliñado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    desaliñada
    English:
    disheveled
    - dishevelled
    - dowdy
    - frumpy
    - scruffily
    - scruffy
    - sloppy
    - slovenly
    - untidy
    - bedraggled
    * * *
    desaliñado, -a adj
    [persona, aspecto] scruffy;
    un tipo de aspecto desaliñado a scruffy-looking guy
    * * *
    adj slovenly
    * * *
    desaliñado, -da adj
    : slovenly, untidy
    * * *
    desaliñado adj scruffy [comp. scruffier; superl. scruffiest]

    Spanish-English dictionary > desaliñado

  • 6 despeinado

    adj.
    uncombed, tousled, unkempt.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: despeinar.
    * * *
    1→ link=despeinar despeinar
    1 dishevelled (US disheveled), unkempt, tousled
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ [pelo] ruffled, messed up
    2.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo <pelo/melena> unkempt, disheveled*

    estar/andar despeinado — to have one's hair in a mess

    * * *
    = bedraggled, unkempt hair, unkempt.
    Ex. This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.
    Ex. The article 'Bad hair days in the Palaeolithic' argues that the familiar depiction of cavemen with longish, unkempt hair is not congruent with available archaeological data.
    Ex. Modern tourists lack a classical training, and most of them are bewildered by such unkempt ruins as those that are found in Rome.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo <pelo/melena> unkempt, disheveled*

    estar/andar despeinado — to have one's hair in a mess

    * * *
    = bedraggled, unkempt hair, unkempt.

    Ex: This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.

    Ex: The article 'Bad hair days in the Palaeolithic' argues that the familiar depiction of cavemen with longish, unkempt hair is not congruent with available archaeological data.
    Ex: Modern tourists lack a classical training, and most of them are bewildered by such unkempt ruins as those that are found in Rome.

    * * *
    unkempt, disheveled*, uncombed
    no puedes ir así, tan despeinado you can't go with your hair in such a mess
    * * *

    Del verbo despeinar: ( conjugate despeinar)

    despeinado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    despeinado    
    despeinar
    despeinado
    ◊ -da adjetivo ‹pelo/melena unkempt, disheveled( conjugate disheveled);

    estar despeinado to have one's hair in a mess
    despeinar ( conjugate despeinar) verbo transitivo: despeinado a algn to mess up sb's hair
    despeinarse verbo pronominal
    to mess one's hair up
    despeinado,-a adjetivo dishevelled, with untidy hair

    ' despeinado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    despeinada
    English:
    disheveled
    - dishevelled
    - tousled
    - unkempt
    - bedraggled
    - wind
    * * *
    despeinado, -a adj
    1. [por el viento] windswept
    2. [descuidado] [pelo] dishevelled, uncombed;
    no vayas así, tan despeinado don't go like that, with your hair in such a mess
    * * *
    adj disheveled, Br
    dishevelled;
    está despeinada her hair’s a mess
    * * *
    despeinado, -da adj
    : disheveled, tousled
    estoy despeinada: my hair's a mess

    Spanish-English dictionary > despeinado

  • 7 empapado

    adj.
    soaking, soaking-wet, soppy, drenched.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: empapar.
    * * *
    1→ link=empapar empapar
    1 soaked
    * * *
    (f. - empapada)
    adj.
    * * *
    ADJ soaked, soaking wet
    * * *
    = sodden, water-soaked, bedraggled, saturated, soggy [soggier -comp., soggiest -sup.], drenched to the skin, wringing wet, soaking wet, wet through to the skin.
    Ex. He looked up and descried a gym class, all wet and draggled, scurrying back across the sodden football field.
    Ex. This article describes the freezing, drying and cleaning of water-soaked and smoke-damaged books.
    Ex. This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.
    Ex. Place a drop of a saturated solution of sugar in water on the paper and dab up the excess liquid with cotton wool.
    Ex. The snakes had been kept in the soggy bilges for forty days and forty nights and were in pretty sad shape.
    Ex. A large party braved the elements on foot, and when they reached the summit they were drenched to the skin.
    Ex. The water washes in over the sides of the raft and from the waist down you will be wringing wet.
    Ex. NASA scientists say the Mars rovers have found what they were looking for -- hard evidence that the red planet was once soaking wet.
    Ex. It rained all the way and we arrived about 12.45, wet through to the skin.
    ----
    * empapado en sudor = sweaty [sweatier -comp., sweatiest -sup.].
    * empapado hasta los huesos = drenched to the skin, soaked to the skin, wringing wet, soaking wet, wet through to the skin.
    * * *
    = sodden, water-soaked, bedraggled, saturated, soggy [soggier -comp., soggiest -sup.], drenched to the skin, wringing wet, soaking wet, wet through to the skin.

    Ex: He looked up and descried a gym class, all wet and draggled, scurrying back across the sodden football field.

    Ex: This article describes the freezing, drying and cleaning of water-soaked and smoke-damaged books.
    Ex: This novel's far-fetched but intriguing plot places a rather bedraggled and unimpressive Hitler on Australian soil in 1919.
    Ex: Place a drop of a saturated solution of sugar in water on the paper and dab up the excess liquid with cotton wool.
    Ex: The snakes had been kept in the soggy bilges for forty days and forty nights and were in pretty sad shape.
    Ex: A large party braved the elements on foot, and when they reached the summit they were drenched to the skin.
    Ex: The water washes in over the sides of the raft and from the waist down you will be wringing wet.
    Ex: NASA scientists say the Mars rovers have found what they were looking for -- hard evidence that the red planet was once soaking wet.
    Ex: It rained all the way and we arrived about 12.45, wet through to the skin.
    * empapado en sudor = sweaty [sweatier -comp., sweatiest -sup.].
    * empapado hasta los huesos = drenched to the skin, soaked to the skin, wringing wet, soaking wet, wet through to the skin.

    * * *

    Del verbo empapar: ( conjugate empapar)

    empapado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    empapado    
    empapar
    empapar ( conjugate empapar) verbo transitivo
    a) ( embeber) ‹esponja/toalla/galleta to soak


    empaparse verbo pronominal ( mojarse mucho) [persona/zapatos/ropa] to get soaking wet
    empapado,-a adjetivo soaked
    empapar verbo transitivo
    1 (mojar, calar) to soak: llegó con la camisa empapada en sudor, she came home with her shirt soaked in sweat
    2 (con un paño) to soak up
    ' empapado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    calada
    - calado
    - chorrear
    - empapada
    English:
    all
    - soak
    - soaking
    - sodden
    - soggy
    - sopping
    - wet
    - dripping
    - water
    * * *
    empapado, -a adj
    soaked, drenched;
    iba empapado en sudor he was soaked o drenched in sweat
    * * *
    adj soaked, dripping wet
    * * *
    empapado, -da adj
    : soggy, sodden
    * * *
    empapado adj soaking / soaked

    Spanish-English dictionary > empapado

  • 8 desastrado

    adj.
    ragged, sloppy, bedraggled, down-at-heel.
    * * *
    1 (desgraciado) unfortunate
    2 (desaseado) untidy, slovenly, unkempt, scruffy
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 untidy person, scruff
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [persona, aspecto] (=sucio) scruffy, untidy; (=harapiento) shabby, ragged
    2) (=desgraciado) unlucky
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < persona> scruffy, untidy; <habitación/trabajo> untidy
    * * *
    = scruffy [scruffier -comp., scuffiest -sup.], dag, scruff, daggy [daggier -comp., daggiest -sup].
    Nota: Palabra de origen australiano que en su origen se refiere a la suciedad que se le pega a las ovejas en el trasero.
    Ex. The article 'Surprise: Scruffy Students Now Don Glad Rags for Class' reports that high school students throughout the country are dressing up these days and that what is chic varies from region to region.
    Ex. A dag will commonly not really care what they're wearing, being more interested in comfort than looks.
    Ex. Part of the reason he is such a scruff is he took on sponsorship to raise money for charity by agreeing to not have his beard or hair cut for the better part of a year.
    Ex. What wearing daggy clothes is all about for me is feeling relaxed, knowing I can wear them around people I'm comfortable with.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < persona> scruffy, untidy; <habitación/trabajo> untidy
    * * *
    = scruffy [scruffier -comp., scuffiest -sup.], dag, scruff, daggy [daggier -comp., daggiest -sup].
    Nota: Palabra de origen australiano que en su origen se refiere a la suciedad que se le pega a las ovejas en el trasero.

    Ex: The article 'Surprise: Scruffy Students Now Don Glad Rags for Class' reports that high school students throughout the country are dressing up these days and that what is chic varies from region to region.

    Ex: A dag will commonly not really care what they're wearing, being more interested in comfort than looks.
    Ex: Part of the reason he is such a scruff is he took on sponsorship to raise money for charity by agreeing to not have his beard or hair cut for the better part of a year.
    Ex: What wearing daggy clothes is all about for me is feeling relaxed, knowing I can wear them around people I'm comfortable with.

    * * *
    A (desaseado) ‹persona› scruffy, untidy; ‹habitación/trabajo› untidy
    B ( liter) (sin estrella, desgraciado) ‹persona› ill-starred ( liter); ‹proyecto› ill-fated ( liter)
    * * *

    desastrado
    ◊ -da adjetivo ‹ persona scruffy, untidy;


    habitación/trabajo untidy
    desastrado,-a
    I adjetivo untidy, scruffy
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino scruff, scruffy person
    ' desastrado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    desastrada
    English:
    seedy
    * * *
    desastrado, -a adj
    [desaseado] scruffy;
    ¿cómo puedes ir siempre tan desastrado? how can you always go about looking so scruffy?
    * * *
    adj untidy

    Spanish-English dictionary > desastrado

  • 9 enlodado

    adj.
    muddy, bedraggled.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: enlodar.
    * * *
    = muddy [muddier -comp., muddiest -sup,], mucky [muckier -comp., muckiest -sup.].
    Ex. In later years, the famous book mythological significance of muddy footprints introduced me to the ancient Hippopotamian culture.
    Ex. Bulrush prefers full or partial sun, wet conditions, and soil that is mucky or sandy.
    * * *
    = muddy [muddier -comp., muddiest -sup,], mucky [muckier -comp., muckiest -sup.].

    Ex: In later years, the famous book mythological significance of muddy footprints introduced me to the ancient Hippopotamian culture.

    Ex: Bulrush prefers full or partial sun, wet conditions, and soil that is mucky or sandy.

    * * *
    enlodado, -da adj
    barroso: muddy

    Spanish-English dictionary > enlodado

  • 10 chancludo

    adj.
    scruffy, sloppy, bedraggled, slovenly.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo (Méx fam) scruffy, sloppy
    * * *
    - da adjetivo (Méx fam) scruffy, sloppy
    * * *
    ( Méx fam) scruffy, sloppy

    Spanish-English dictionary > chancludo

  • 11 fachento

    adj.
    1 stuck-up, pretentious, snooty.
    2 slovenly, bedraggled, scruffy.
    m.
    show-off, showoff, bragger, boaster.
    * * *
    ( Méx fam); scruffy fachoso adj 4. (↑ fachoso)
    * * *
    fachento, -a adj
    Méx Fam scruffy;
    andar fachento to be o look scruffy

    Spanish-English dictionary > fachento

  • 12 ensuciado

    adj.
    dirty, bedraggled.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: ensuciar.

    Spanish-English dictionary > ensuciado

См. также в других словарях:

  • bedraggled — index disordered Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • bedraggled — 1727, pp. adjective from BEDRAGGLE (Cf. bedraggle) …   Etymology dictionary

  • bedraggled — [adj] unkempt decrepit, dilapidated, dirty, disheveled, disordered, dowdy, drenched, dripping, faded, messy, muddied, muddy, run down, seedy, shabby, sloppy, slovenly, sodden, soiled, stained, sullied, tacky, tattered, threadbare, untidy, wet;… …   New thesaurus

  • bedraggled — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ dishevelled …   English terms dictionary

  • bedraggled — [[t]bɪdræ̱g(ə)ld[/t]] ADJ GRADED Someone or something that is bedraggled looks untidy because they have got wet or dirty. He looked weary and bedraggled. ...a bedraggled group of journalists. Syn: scruffy …   English dictionary

  • bedraggled — adjective 1. limp and soiled as if dragged in the mud (Freq. 2) the beggar s bedraggled clothes scarecrows in battered hats or draggled skirts • Syn: ↑draggled • Similar to: ↑dirty, ↑soiled, ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • Bedraggled — Bedraggle Be*drag gle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bedraggled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Bedraggling}.] To draggle; to soil, as garments which, in walking, are suffered to drag in dust, mud, etc. Swift. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • bedraggled — adjective Date: 1727 1. left wet and limp by or as if by rain 2. soiled and stained by or as if by trailing in mud 3. dilapidated < bedraggled buildings > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • bedraggled — be·drag·gled (bĭ drăgʹəld) adj. 1. a. Wet; limp. b. Soiled by or as if by having been dragged through mud. 2. Being in a condition of deterioration; dilapidated: a street of bedraggled tenements. * * * …   Universalium

  • bedraggled — be|drag|gled [bıˈdrægəld] adj looking untidy, wet, and dirty, especially because you have been out in the rain ▪ Exhausted soldiers crawled into camp, frozen and bedraggled …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • bedraggled — adjective looking untidy and dirty, especially because you have been out in the rain: She came in wet and bedraggled …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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