(For clothes) Damaged, with holes, as a consequence of being worn intensively.
1I still got years left in me,' he said, between ragged breaths.
2Movement was often ragged, however, and initial interesting lighting was not sustained.
3The sunlight danced in gleams through the holes in the ragged roof.
4Marianne Lambert has been run ragged by Virgin Media in recent months.
5When she spoke at last, her voice was ragged, soft, yet certain.
6He lay between the ragged sheets; and half an hour crept by.
7The mountain came down out of the sky in ragged, uneven steps.
8Her breathing is ragged and her free hand rests on his shoulder.
9The only visible wound was a wide, ragged opening in the abdomen.
10Even all ragged edges, he was still a million bucks plus tax.
11The sun rose on a column already ragged these six days out.
12The ragged wires projected from their various holes in ceilings and walls.
13Both looked back several times before they vanished into the ragged jungle.
14Purple and crimson flares rolled across the bottom of the ragged sky.
15The cabin crouched ragged and black at the edge of black waters.
16The wounds left were ragged with the path of the chitin flight.
Sobre este termo
ragged
rag Verbo
Indicativo · Pretérito perfeito
Ragged nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América