A person who is unusually thin and scrawny.
Sinônimos
Examples for "scrag"
Examples for "scrag"
1The compatriot of Rachel was wrapping up a scrag of mutton.
2Now, perhaps you know somebody who is a scrag in society.
3Hunt for the spirit of the coming ruction and try to scrag it!
4No wan iver seed a scrag of her after that.
5And now I've done it, you want to scrag me.
1The London cab is all very well for a short and thin person.
2You rarely meet a thin person on the street, says Sithole.
3A thin person adopting the above light diet will generally get into good condition.
4This was a tall, thin person clad in black, with a gaunt and austere face.
5One watches a thin person thicken layer by layer, and a young active person became immured.
1Remove the skin and bones, and cut the codfish into small squares.
2Keep the skin and bones for use in soups, braises and stocks.
3After drying, remove the skin and bones and flake with a fork.
4Her limbs, hands and feet were completely wasted, just skin and bones.
5She lost all her hair, and was just withered skin and bones.
6The old man who was their leader was just skin and bones.
7Take any kind of cooked fish and free it of skin and bones.
8Separate the remnants of a baked bluefish into flakes, discarding skin and bones.
9When I dine I want something more than skin and bones.
10He is nothing but skin and bones and surely cannot live much longer.
11He's nothing but skin and bones; he has pissed his tallow.
12His aging skin and bones remembered that southern climate with longing.
13She was skin and bones and close to the end of the line.
14She was pretty, all skin and bones, blossoming into someone beautiful.
15He looked to be a hundred, all skin and bones, withered and leathery.
16The child was fourteen now, but she was skin and bones.