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Crossword clues for poorly

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
poorly
I.adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be well/extensively/poorly etc documented
▪ It is well documented that men die younger than women.
beautifully/skilfully/poorly etc executed
▪ The skaters’ routine was perfectly executed.
poorly lit
▪ a poorly lit car park
poorly off
well-ventilated/poorly ventilated etc
▪ a well-ventilated kitchen
well/badly/poorly etc written
▪ The article is very well written.
well/poorly/fully etc equipped
▪ a well equipped hospital
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
paid
▪ Here the homeworkers poorly paid job dovetails neatly into the work for which she is not paid at all.
▪ We went to eat lunch in a restaurant frequented by poorly paid clerks and secretaries and, no doubt, messengers.
▪ She could only get a poorly paid job as a sales assistant in a King's Road shoe boutique.
▪ Conversely, pursuing a mundane, poorly paid job or no job at all may provoke a sense of alienation from society.
▪ Low morale among poorly paid health workers has led to strikes and lessened the quality of care.
■ VERB
attend
▪ Round five of the Foundry Bouldering Competition was again poorly attended.
▪ At the Games: Poorly organized and poorly attended, the Paris Games turn into a disaster.
▪ Traditional film nights were ditched and lectures, which had been poorly attended, were radically reduced in number.
▪ It was one of the most poorly attended games in the tournament.
▪ And if Fosdyke had been popular, it's strange that his funeral was so poorly attended.
▪ If you don't and slalom continues to be so poorly attended it risks becoming a has-been sport.
control
▪ Our results show that poorly controlled surgical pain significantly reduces tissue-oxygen tension.
define
▪ However, the density of that material is poorly defined by these observations.
▪ A fourth structure, with a poorly defined plan, was interpreted as for the preparation of frit.
design
▪ Such organizations can be said to be poorly designed.
develop
▪ Humans have a vestigial appendix which is so poorly developed that it is prone to infection.
document
▪ In most cases, such changes are poorly documented, if they are recorded at all.
▪ The TCP/IP implementation is still poorly documented.
▪ Unfortunately however, these functions are poorly documented and it takes quite some time to discover how to use them.
▪ The archaeology of this region is poorly documented.
equip
▪ So Britain is poorly equipped to even consider making any comparisons of the productivity or usefulness of research.
▪ The small number of white troops available for defense were poorly equipped and seldom paid.
▪ Most schools are in such poor physical condition and are so poorly equipped that this is unlikely to be a viable option.
▪ Numerous surveys show how poorly equipped students are to enter a work force that faces increasing technical complexity and intensifying competition.
▪ Most noticeably the troops were poorly equipped to deal with riots.
▪ To us poorly equipped and half-starved rebels it was a revelation.
▪ It is one the region is still poorly equipped to manage.
▪ For years after Franco's rule, the army, badly paid and poorly equipped, was viewed with suspicion.
execute
▪ There were hardly any well known names; the recently purchased Simon Vouet is very poorly executed.
▪ Their spree of corporate takeovers is, for the most part, wildly ill-advised and poorly executed.
▪ There is an occasional poorly executed sketch of a tiny organism or of a bone and muscle structure.
fare
▪ They rarely publish their arguments in the technical literature; when they do, the arguments usually fare poorly.
▪ The state also fared poorly in the teen birth rate category.
▪ This prompted two Republican candidates who are faring poorly to invite Mr Weicker back to the party; he refused.
know
▪ Thelodonts are not included in these classifications, they are too poorly known.
▪ The cost of these complex operations is considerable but poorly known.
▪ A number of clades are still too poorly known to be included.
▪ The equation of state of molecular hydrogen at high pressures and temperatures is particularly important and yet it is poorly known.
▪ These were put down to provide underground information in critical areas where the succession of rocks was poorly known.
▪ J 2 is in any case a weak constraint on density models and when it is this poorly known it is useless.
▪ The tail of galeaspids remains poorly known.
maintain
▪ Higher percentages of the elderly than of the general adult population live in accommodation built before 1919 that is often poorly maintained.
▪ He wrote that he saw poorly maintained practice fields with one temporary goal post for kickers.
▪ There was, however, evidence that public sector homes have been poorly maintained and that councils had spent their money elsewhere.
pay
▪ Thus while most farm workers recognize that they are poorly paid, few blame their own employer for their poverty.
▪ Until now all that women were taught to do, from housework to carpet weaving, was devalued and poorly paid.
▪ The jobs themselves are poorly paid, but the benefits, especially in higher education, are incalculable.
▪ For one thing, in terms of buying power, Congress is probably more poorly paid today than it has ever been.
▪ A survey revealed that scientists were poorly paid, on the whole.
▪ For the poorly paid, the twelve-cent round-trip fare could eat up 10 percent or more of their wages.
perform
▪ We do not wish to perform poorly or to undercut our objectives.
▪ The pressure on Sainsbury will continue if it performs poorly, he said.
▪ A new body, the National Clinical Assessment Authority, has been set up to tackle the problem of poorly performing doctors.
▪ Who or what was at fault when subordinates made mistakes or performed poorly?
▪ But after performing poorly at the polls it quickly disappeared.
▪ Physical education classes were difficult at times, for Sean performed poorly in most competitive games.
▪ However, their use is limited because they are brittle and perform poorly in tensile loading situations.
▪ It would be the shortcut enabling their poorly performing public schools to catch up to the rest of the nation.
serve
▪ It does seem to be the case that Fuchs was very poorly served by his finance director Cees List.
▪ London is relatively poorly served in this respect, as are historic towns subject to significant Conservation Area protection.
▪ In some areas there may be centres of population which are very poorly served by public services.
train
▪ But they failed to stop the accident because staff were poorly trained.
▪ The police are poorly trained and grossly underpaid.
understand
▪ Astronauts have learned that we live on a delicate planet whose complex workings are poorly understood.
▪ The exact cause of hypercalcemia in this disorder is poorly understood.
▪ The internal arrangements and uses of these buildings are poorly understood.
▪ But back then, he says, aerodynamics were poorly understood.
▪ For some poorly understood reason, this most often involves the visual areas of the occipital cortex.
▪ The directive signals an inexorable process towards liberalization, but with many details left open and implications poorly understood.
▪ These steroids are uricosuric, but the mechanism by which they promote uric acid excretion is poorly understood.
write
▪ The film was poorly written and acted, and utilised much stock footage of manoeuvres supplied by the Department of Defense.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be well/poorly/generously supplied with sth
▪ The lounge was well supplied with ashtrays.
▪ Football stars are well supplied with female groupies.
▪ The markets are well supplied with agricultural produce, and with linens and yarns from the surrounding country.
well-fed/under-fed/poorly-fed
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a poorly lit room
▪ The article is really poorly written.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Compared with her predecessors Elizabeth was poorly placed to raise loans, especially during her later years.
▪ Environmentalists, claiming that the plant is poorly constructed, have for years objected to its opening.
▪ It gets on poorly with other genres.
▪ Port lawyers at the time drew up poorly worded contracts that do not properly protect district interests.
▪ So if yours is looking poorly, hack it out and replace it.
▪ Until now all that women were taught to do, from housework to carpet weaving, was devalued and poorly paid.
II.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
so
▪ Since she reads so poorly, she called up and asked me to come over.
very
▪ Some groups are doing very well economically and others very poorly.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ "I'm afraid your grandmother's very poorly," the nurse on duty said.
▪ Dad was always out, Mum was often poorly, and I had to look after the rest of the kids.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Marie's still rocking - hugging herself like some of the poorly kids at school used to.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Poorly

Poorly \Poor"ly\, adv.

  1. In a poor manner or condition; without plenty, or sufficiency, or suitable provision for comfort; as, to live poorly.

  2. With little or no success; indifferently; with little profit or advantage; as, to do poorly in business.

  3. Meanly; without spirit.

    Nor is their courage or their wealth so low, That from his wars they poorly would retire.
    --Dryden.

  4. Without skill or merit; as, he performs poorly.

    Poorly off, not well off; not rich.

Poorly

Poorly \Poor"ly\, a. Somewhat ill; indisposed; not in health. ``Having been poorly in health.''
--T. Scott.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
poorly

early 13c., "inadequately, badly, insufficiently," from poor (adj.) + -ly (2). Meaning "in ill health" is from 1750.

Wiktionary
poorly

a. ill, unwell, sick adv. 1 In a poor manner or condition; without plenty, or sufficiency, or suitable provision for comfort. 2 With little or no success; indifferently; with little profit or advantage. 3 Meanly; without spirit. 4 Without skill or merit.

WordNet
poorly
  1. adj. somewhat ill or prone to illness; "my poor ailing grandmother"; "feeling a bit indisposed today"; "you look a little peaked"; "feeling poorly"; "a sickly child"; "is unwell and can't come to work" [syn: ailing, indisposed, peaked(p), poorly(p), sickly, unwell, under the weather]

  2. adv. (`ill' is often used as a combining form) in a poor or improper or unsatisfactory manner; not well; "he was ill prepared"; "it ill befits a man to betray old friends"; "the car runs badly"; "he performed badly on the exam"; "the team played poorly"; "ill-fitting clothes"; "an ill-conceived plan" [syn: ill, badly] [ant: well]

Usage examples of "poorly".

The moment we set foot on shore, two men, very poorly dressed and of unprepossessing appearance, came to us and begged for assistance.

Aside from two poorly dated Neanderthal skulls from Germany and Gibraltar, and a few other little-reported finds of modern morphology, there were no discoveries of hominid fossil remains.

As monarchy has its danger, so does demarchy, the danger of any power: that poorly conceived as the opinions of its wielder may be, he wields it.

Zoroastrian dualism, the same arrogant assumption that the Goddess could be banished, when all that was banished was a poorly differentiated mythos that many ecofeminists have severely reinterpreted to fit their ideology.

Mahtra was ready to tell someoneanyonewhat had happened, but it was very difficult to keep her thoughts dear enough for the august emerita to understand without saying the words, however poorly, as they formed in her mind.

I am a fair horseman, can read English well and Arabic poorly, though I know none of the other languages of Gol Goth.

Bragadin had been as a father to me, living poorly, and even going into debt that I might have enough.

I was at last able to study, Madame Leotard tested me to see how much I knew, and finding that I read very well but wrote very poorly, considered it absolutely imperative to start teaching me French.

Cavius and Kidogo thought that their images were very lifelike, but insisted that Pandion had drawn his own portrait poorly.

He charged toward the Liten who had treated him so poorly, his focus on him and only him.

Though Spock preferred his greens to possess a distinct bite of chlorophyll, without any admixture of hemoglobin or myoglobin or whatever animal protein preceded the greens in the synthesizer, he could subsist on poorly designed food.

Miss Trent was at liberty to instruct her nurseling, neither her advice nor her assistance was required when Miss Charlotte was feeling poorly.

The things were full of cobwebs and dead insects and rat turds, poorly lit by the occasional inward-looking peephole or narrow slits or oillets in the exterior masonry.

Still he could not bring himself to put blame on her just so Orval might not think poorly of him.

Made girls be poorly, in the regular way, when their poorliness had stopped?