raggedness

IPA: rˈægʌdnʌs

noun

  • The characteristic of being ragged.
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Examples of "raggedness" in Sentences

  • Occasionally, there is a little bit of "raggedness" in the coordination.
  • As the poet Rumi said of his teacher, Shams, "You make my raggedness silky."
  • The raggedness showed as Miami committed 17 turnovers, including seven by Bosh.
  • But the same tendencies, together with a sort of raggedness which is no doubt intentional, weaken his epigrams and polemical poems.
  • There was also some ensemble raggedness at the edges, perfect for the sighs in the Campra "Suite" and the bluesy harmonies of the Muffat sonata but not as welcome for the playfulness of the Vivaldi concertos or the alacrity of Guillemain's "Symphony in Italian Style."
  • Dernbach, born in Johannesburg, could have tipped the balance six to five in favour of post-colonial backpack man, a defining moment in what future England cricket historians may call The Theme Pub Years, an era when England players came gurgling straight out of the barrel ready-made, like a pint of brilliantly homogenised long-life Australo-Irish lager-stout product, obliterating once and for all the real ale raggedness of our indigenous tickle-stick-flailing Morris‑cricket traditions.

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synonyms for raggednessdescribing words for raggedness
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