Find the word definition

Crossword clues for worn

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
worn
I.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
threadbare/worn (=very thin and in bad condition)
▪ It was a dingy room with a threadbare carpet.
worn out
▪ You must be absolutely worn out.
worn smooth
▪ The stone steps had been worn smooth.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be worn to a frazzle
▪ We were worn to a frazzle after our last-minute Christmas shopping.
II.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
well
▪ John Smith, once everyone's favourite, looks like assuming the same well worn cloak.
▪ But there are a few well worn examples which have clearly seen action although not for law and order.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Lying on the hospital bed, Pete looked worn and fragile.
▪ Paula handed me several worn dollar bills.
▪ The brake pads are very worn.
▪ There was a worn Persian rug on the parquet floor.
▪ We used to cut up worn blankets to make sleeping bags for the children.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A worn braid feels rough and is best cut away and the line joined by a blood knot.
▪ A second woman was folding worn sweaters and putting them away in a scratched wardrobe.
▪ He thought he could hear footsteps now, nailed boots scuffing on worn stone.
▪ The worn crazy paving provides a soft and very unobtrusive backdrop.
▪ The cement floor was covered by a worn brown linoleum.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
worn

Warn \Warn\ (w[add]rn), v. t. [OE. wernen, AS. weornan, wyrnan. Cf. Warn to admonish.] To refuse. [Written also wern, worn.] [Obs.]
--Chaucer.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
worn

c.1500, from adjectival use of past participle of wear (v.); from Old English geworen. Worn-out "exhausted by wear, made ineffective by overuse" is attested from 1610s in reference to things, c.1700 in reference to persons.

Wiktionary
worn
  1. damaged and shabby as a result of much use v

  2. (past participle of wear English)

WordNet
worn

See wear

wear
  1. v. be dressed in; "She was wearing yellow that day" [syn: have on]

  2. have on one's person; "He wore a red ribbon"; "bear a scar" [syn: bear]

  3. have in one's aspect; wear an expression of one's attitude or personality; "He always wears a smile"

  4. deteriorate through use or stress; "The constant friction wore out the cloth" [syn: wear off, wear out, wear thin]

  5. have or show an appearance of; "wear one's hair in a certain way"

  6. last and be usable; "This dress wore well for almost ten years" [syn: hold out, endure]

  7. go to pieces; "The lawn mower finally broke"; "The gears wore out"; "The old chair finally fell apart completely" [syn: break, wear out, bust, fall apart]

  8. exhaust or tire through overuse or great strain or stress; "We wore ourselves out on this hike" [syn: tire, wear upon, tire out, weary, jade, wear out, outwear, wear down, fag out, fag, fatigue] [ant: refresh]

  9. put clothing on one's body; "What should I wear today?"; "He put on his best suit for the wedding"; "The princess donned a long blue dress"; "The queen assumed the stately robes"; "He got into his jeans" [syn: put on, get into, don, assume]

  10. [also: worn, wore]

wear
  1. n. impairment resulting from long use; "the tires showed uneven wear"

  2. a covering designed to be worn on a person's body [syn: clothing, article of clothing, vesture]

  3. the act of having on your person as a covering or adornment; "she bought it for everyday wear" [syn: wearing]

  4. [also: worn, wore]

worn
  1. adj. affected by wear; damaged by long use; "worn threads on the screw"; "a worn suit"; "the worn pockets on the jacket" [ant: unworn]

  2. showing the wearing effects of overwork or care or suffering; "looking careworn as she bent over her mending"; "her face was drawn and haggard from sleeplessness"; "that raddled but still noble face"; "shocked to see the worn look of his handsome young face"- Charles Dickens [syn: careworn, drawn, haggard, raddled]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "worn".

Her exoskeleton was as clearly artificial as dentures: alloplastic bone worn on the outside.

Although Lydia tried hard to believe that Ambry would find her again, her ability to hope was worn very thin.

He begins to doubt the wisdom of reliance upon that worn apothegm about absence conquering love.

We do not consider that apperception spares us the trouble of examining ever anew and in small detail all the objects and phenomena that present themselves to us, so as to get their meaning, or that it thus prevents our mental power from scattering and from being worn out with wearisome, fruitless detail labors.

In fact, of course, he was simply an appraiser and could have worn an Armani suit for all the heavy lifting he was going to perform.

To his right was a glass-enclosed pen of worn, compacted earth interspersed with tree branches and barkless logs.

He was in a striped blue western-cut shirt, long-sleeved with pearl snaps, and worn blue jeans under equally worn batwing chaps held up by a wide, silver-buckled belt.

His jeans and boots were much more disreputable-looking than hers, his batwing chaps stained and worn.

An edict was published and affixed to the doors of all the churches, in which it was declared that breeches with braguettes were only to be worn by the public hangmen.

This one was sporting a soft, brimless cap of bright red and blue squares, worn at a rakish angle.

These coins were emblazoned with the profile of the second King Mithridates of the Parthians, a short-necked old man with a nose suitable for catching fish, carefully curled hair and pointed beard, and on his head the little round brimless hat his ambassadors had worn, except that his boasted the ribbon of the diadem and had ear-flaps and neck-shield.

Ronny Bronston, but he had a nervous vitality about him that would have worn out the other in a few hours.

Yet his father stood before him like a small, battered bird, the buttonless shirt folded gently over his thin chest and the worn leather slippers searching out the floorboards hesitantly when he walked.

Guillaume, worn down by the inconveniences of excommunication, determined, since he was afraid of no one, to himself accost the man of God boldly with threats of reprisal.

Such are sandy soils that have been much worn by cropping, and also stiff clays in which the humus has become practically exhausted.