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Despicable - BBC, say
Answer for the clue "Despicable - BBC, say ", 6 letters:
scabby
Alternative clues for the word scabby
Word definitions for scabby in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. covered with scabs [also: scabbiest , scabbier ]
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Affected with scabs; full of scabs. 2 Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Scabby \Scab"by\, a. [Compar. Scabbier ; superl. Scabbiest .] Affected with scabs; full of scabs. Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy. --Swift.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ scabby knees EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ I don't look at the face, only at the scabby hand. ▪ She's got me by the jeans - the hand's scabby - she's got some skin disease. ▪ The scabby , festering evil went out of him at ...
Usage examples of scabby.
In the situation we were in, which was one of total, complete and utter heat and boredom and wondering what manner of crawling scabby insect you were going to dine on next, the fact of four hundred headless Filipinos was a topic for pleasant clubhouse gossip, something to discuss briefly in mild awe and almost admiration for the ginks for at least having a sense of spectacle and to be grateful for in a way because it took our minds off our own problems.
There, his superior fearing lest his flock should take contagion from this scabby sheep, sent him to their original monastery near Feltre, a lonely building on a height.
Ryan had once come across a crude book that dealt with the range of disorders that ravaged scabbies: dermoid cysts, rodent ulcers, keloids, lipomata, epitheliomata, acne, psoriasis and all manner of unnamed rashes.
Add in assorted knobbly swellings, flecks of crusty black for the split lip and the scabby bits, and I was undoubtedly quite the picture of health.
There were also many of the darwish holy beggars, as ragged, scabby, filthy and evil-looking as those in any other Eastern city.
In the situation we were in, which was one of total, complete and utter heat and boredom and wondering what manner of crawling scabby insect you were going to dine on next, the fact of four hundred headless Filipinos was a topic for pleasant clubhouse gossip, something to discuss briefly in mild awe and almost admiration for the ginks for at least having a sense of spectacle and to be grateful for in a way because it took our minds off our own problems.
Arnie always chose the sloppiest, scabbiest, rottenest tramps in the world when he wanted a woman, so Little Bob always made Arnie go to a doctor for a checkup before letting him back.
There are a few gaudies and scabby sluts who pox you just by breathing on you.
There, his superior fearing lest his flock should take contagion from this scabby sheep, sent him to their original monastery near Feltre, a lonely building on a height.
And in the midst of this rabble, serene as the Virgin Mother in her barnful of shepherds and scabby livestock, one amazing, beautiful thing: a large, oval white platter painted with delicate blue forget-me-nots, bone china, so fine that sunlight passes through it.
Ramifications in every direction, crossings, of trenches, branches, goose-feet, stars, as in military mines, coecum, blind alleys, vaults lined with saltpetre, pestiferous pools, scabby sweats, on the walls, drops dripping from the ceilings, darkness.
He was a coprophiliac, and sat down before a plateful of steaming excrement, his eyes vast with greed, while a scabby monkey, its bald face horribly human, bared its puckered backside to the viewer.
It was cluttered with twisted, drooping chimney stacks, and buckled rafter apexes gnarled with scabby lichens.
Ryan had once come across a crude book that dealt with the range of disorders that ravaged scabbies dermoid cysts, rodent ulcers, keloids, lipomata, epitheliomata, acne, psoriasis and all manner of unnamed rashes.
There were ironworkers, once known as smithies, and ferrous engineers, and platers, and ironmasters whose hands sometimes turned black and scabby, and enginewrights and finishers with missing fingers, all tangled together through processes which the foremen and the managers, themselves members of other guilds, or higher branches of the same ones, strove to control and contain.