(Used especially of vegetation) having lost all moisture.
1The goat-herds even had forsaken the dried-up pastures and the leafless hedges.
2She thought again of that dried-up corpse, but not for very long.
3Well, go back to the first point: the dried-up appearance of things.
4It is parked deep within the Endemol complex, near a dried-up river.
5The way that little dried-up sinner found out everything was positively uncanny.
6The house contained a dried-up old woman and four white-headed, half-naked children.
7A dried-up cone is crushed to sudden splinters under my bare foot.
8He was small, dried-up and weather-beaten, and wore a thin, threadbare coat.
9Mr. Solomon Madgin was a little dried-up man, about sixty years old.
10Is it any wonder that she is thin and dried-up and snappy?
11Big lawn, dried-up pond, hedge, stone bird, goldenrod, TV aerial, no cat.
12And in the old dried-up soil, how many strange treasures remain hidden!
13So what'll you be then, a dried-up prune of an old maid?
14It's quite possible that he also knows about the dried-up well by now.
15She looked defiantly at the yellow, dried-up creature in the bed.
16Hawk led the way down into the thorn-bushes and dried-up plants.