untidy

IPA: ʌntˈaɪdi

verb

  • (transitive) To make untidy, to make a mess

adjective

  • Sloppy.
  • Disorganized.
Advertisement

Examples of "untidy" in Sentences

  • My husband was dreadfully untidy, which is much worse. '
  • Donald Rumsfeld said that the riots were "untidy" because democracy was untidy.
  • It's still an "untidy" situation for job hunters, as it will probably continue to be for some time.
  • They use words like "ad hoc" and, you know, "untidy" and that you move from issue to issue and there isn't the kind of sustained interest in it.
  • Even Miss Peyton's features might have been called untidy, if such a term could be used in connection with a countenance whose every line was aristocratic.
  • She knew she was untidy, and gave herself all pains to cure the fault; but it went beyond her; for she simply did not know what Annemarie would call untidy next.
  • He would have told his Secretary of Defense that the spectacle of looters stripping government buildings down to their concrete skeletons wasn't the kind of untidy freedom the United States could tolerate.
  • "Early in the term the untidy, neglectful school yards were converted into gardens, farmers supplying the seed, and when no mule could be procured for ploughing, four boys were harnessed to draw the plough, while another guided it.
  • Someone once described the Fabian Socialists as "more grieved by the world's mess than hurt by the world's wrongs," and indeed the Fabians often seemed to look upon England as a kind of untidy house which they wree to put in order.
  • ‘Please put away your toys,’ I said to Emilia as I dragged my pathetic self out of the room, tripping over the random dismembered doll parts and stray bits of crafting materials that she keeps in untidy piles throughout the house, ‘otherwise I’ll have to ask Daddy to throw it all away.’

Related Links

synonyms for untidy
Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2024 Copyright: WordPapa