Characteristic of or befitting a slut or slattern; used especially of women.
1It was the nurse, her sleeve lifted, her blowzy face convulsed.
2I got a blowzy blond wig, painted-on jeans and cowboy boots.
3The loveliness of the woods in March is not, assuredly, of this blowzy rustic type.
4Gwendolyn lifted terrified eyes for a second look at the brick-colored hair, the blowzy countenance.
5Meanwhile it gets us a blowzy character, by shouldering roughly among the children of civilization.
6Could other men have loved at all-couldany man love those blowzy, common girls of earth?
7Besides, he goes for big, blowzy women.
8The roof sat at a precarious angle, like a tilted cap on the head of a blowzy drunk.
9Her file photo showed me a blowzy blonde with big Jersey hair, lots of makeup and a slim frame.
10Alma Mater used to be a sentimental lady, barefoot in blowzy drapery, looking afar to vain wisdom and the Greeks.
11Critical feminine eyes might have found her a trifle blowzy; the sick-hearted Basset boy looked once,-hedared not look again.
12Now, however, Athlone, hitherto a perfectly adequate if nondescript and rather blowzy midlands town, has shyly revealed its own growth aspirations.
13No blowzy barmaids for him to-day: an American bar-keep to whom he could tell his troubles and receive the proper meed of sympathy.
14A blowzy young woman, in orange color and green, with short tinsel-covered skirts, bounded wearily on to the stage, smiling, and began to sing: