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单词 haggard
释义

Definition of haggard in English:

haggard

adjective ˈhaɡədˈhæɡərd
  • 1Looking exhausted and unwell, especially from fatigue, worry, or suffering.

    憔悴的,形容枯槁的

    she was pale and haggard
    Alex's haggard face
    Example sentencesExamples
    • These real soldiers are starting to look more haggard every day, obviously suffering from combat stress.
    • The sorcerer looks haggard, exhausted, but otherwise uninjured.
    • The two bandits, their haggard features grim with battle-blood, edged toward the tall warrior.
    • His muscular body was bent and haggard, he was exhausted but still fighting with everything he had.
    • Chloe read my thoughts and judged my appearance, which was haggard and exhausted.
    • I just hope they don't get even more haggard with all that worry than so many of them currently look.
    • Like all the street children, he is thin and haggard.
    • ‘Yes, nurse,’ Dann replied meekly, grinning at her despite his pale, haggard look.
    • His flawless face was now haggard with exhaustion, and she sensed his energy stores were almost depleted.
    • Her father was still there, but this time he was on the phone and his expression was haggard with worry.
    • His unit was this close to packing off his personal effects to his parents, as one of the photos I have is of Dad, noticeably thin and haggard, holding the box addressed to his mother.
    • It featured a ragged, haggard man who was supposed to serve as a warning about the consequences of drug addiction.
    • There were still some remains of her make-up from the day before, smudged mascara underneath her eyes, a thin line of eyeliner all making her look exhausted and almost haggard.
    • Chris was the only one who didn't seem to look haggard and exhausted.
    • They were haggard and thin but strong and well armed.
    • His hair was mussed, his features rather haggard.
    • She was so tired and haggard looking, it hurt him to see her that way.
    • His father ran a hand over his face, slightly haggard in his worry for his son.
    • She is haggard, pale, and her hair is matted with blood.
    • I saw him again yesterday and he still looks haggard and tired.
    Synonyms
    careworn, tired, drained, drawn, raddled
    unwell, unhealthy, sickly, spent, sapped, washed out, rundown, exhausted
    gaunt, grim, pinched, peaked, peaky, hollow-cheeked, hollow-eyed
    pale, wan, grey, ashen, pallid, pasty-faced, sallow
    thin, emaciated, wasted, cadaverous, ghastly, ghostlike, deathlike
  • 2(of a hawk) caught for training as a wild adult of more than twelve months.

    (鹰)野外生长超过一年后被捕获并加以训练的。比较PASSAGE HAWK

    Compare with passage hawk
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We only got two in the nets, but what we lacked in quantity, we made for in quality - a passage goshawk and a haggard red-tailed hawk.
noun ˈhaɡədˈhæɡərd
  • A haggard hawk.

    野外生长一年以上被捕获并加以训练的鹰

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They interred her remains in a corner of the cabbage haggard.

Derivatives

  • haggardly

  • adverbˈhaɡədliˈhæɡərdli
    • Thus are we drawn into an endless life of humiliation, where we haggardly never turn off our televisions, for fear of disappearing.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Vivienne leans haggardly against the wall between us.
      • Nobody is too concerned that a Hollywood heart-throb is playing someone who in real life was barely 5ft tall and looked haggardly middle-aged when he was barely out of his teens.
      • The vines were thick and heftily wooded, larger than any plant life a desert dweller could ever imagine, and more voracious than the most haggardly pack of wolves.
      • She walked past Emily and sat down on the couch, haggardly scrubbing her tear-encrusted face with her hands.
      • ‘Waaaayne… ‘Grandmother Eva began in her deep, hoarse and haggardly voice.
      • Her face was pasty white and she looked quite haggardly.
      • He looked over at Kate to see if she was out of the car yet just in time to see her take in a deep, shaky breath and let it out haggardly.
      • She persisted haggardly, ‘at least when I'm angry with you, I let you know why.’
      • ‘Put me on the flight to Taipei,’ Jake said haggardly.’
  • haggardness

  • nounˈhaɡədnəsˈhæɡərdnəs
    • Looking up, Kristen couldn't help but notice the haggardness of her face, testimony to the nights that sleep eluded her and she worried about having to go to school the next day.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • You slowly straightened your tired shoulders, and some of the haggardness slipped from your face as a smile of determination broke its blackness.
      • The scary truth at the core of this spectacle is not the haggardness of any drag queen, but that these pretenders on screen as well as at the helm of our nation, continue to act, understanding full well that the theater of their manipulations takes on a life and free will of its own.
      • Despite the haggardness of my remaining months in college, I guess I really won't give it up for anything.
      • As he rises, the prisoners start in wonder, for the face they see in the lantern-light is that of their brother, yet strange in its haggardness and its smear of blood on the cheek.
      • Clarissa is certainly middle-aged: She has the dark circles under her eyes, the combination of haggardness and puffiness, that we recognize as the unhappy signifiers of the overworked professional woman.
      • The fashion of worn-out jeans became popularized during the 1990s, along with ruggedness, haggardness, and thinness.
      • His haggardness vanishes as his new ‘star’ rises and is replaced by a relaxed air that all is well.
      • But… there was a haggardness about her that Jack could never put her finger on.
      • But to me, that haggardness is what makes this recording so potent, so intimate and moving.

Origin

Mid 16th century (used in falconry): from French hagard; perhaps related to hedge; later influenced by hag1.

  • A word from falconry, where it is a technical term for an adult hawk caught for training. Unlike hawks bred or raised in captivity, haggards are wild and untamed. Wild-looking people, or their wild-looking eyes, began to be described as haggard in the 17th century, and from there the word developed the sense ‘looking exhausted or unwell’. The word may be related to hedge. See also hawk

Rhymes

laggard

Definition of haggard in US English:

haggard

adjectiveˈhæɡərdˈhaɡərd
  • 1Looking exhausted and unwell, especially from fatigue, worry, or suffering.

    憔悴的,形容枯槁的

    I trailed on behind, haggard and disheveled

    我疲惫不堪地落在后面,形容憔悴,头发蓬乱。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I saw him again yesterday and he still looks haggard and tired.
    • ‘Yes, nurse,’ Dann replied meekly, grinning at her despite his pale, haggard look.
    • Like all the street children, he is thin and haggard.
    • These real soldiers are starting to look more haggard every day, obviously suffering from combat stress.
    • I just hope they don't get even more haggard with all that worry than so many of them currently look.
    • The two bandits, their haggard features grim with battle-blood, edged toward the tall warrior.
    • It featured a ragged, haggard man who was supposed to serve as a warning about the consequences of drug addiction.
    • The sorcerer looks haggard, exhausted, but otherwise uninjured.
    • She was so tired and haggard looking, it hurt him to see her that way.
    • His hair was mussed, his features rather haggard.
    • His unit was this close to packing off his personal effects to his parents, as one of the photos I have is of Dad, noticeably thin and haggard, holding the box addressed to his mother.
    • His flawless face was now haggard with exhaustion, and she sensed his energy stores were almost depleted.
    • There were still some remains of her make-up from the day before, smudged mascara underneath her eyes, a thin line of eyeliner all making her look exhausted and almost haggard.
    • His father ran a hand over his face, slightly haggard in his worry for his son.
    • Chris was the only one who didn't seem to look haggard and exhausted.
    • Her father was still there, but this time he was on the phone and his expression was haggard with worry.
    • She is haggard, pale, and her hair is matted with blood.
    • Chloe read my thoughts and judged my appearance, which was haggard and exhausted.
    • His muscular body was bent and haggard, he was exhausted but still fighting with everything he had.
    • They were haggard and thin but strong and well armed.
    Synonyms
    careworn, tired, drained, drawn, raddled
  • 2(of a hawk) caught for training as a wild adult of more than twelve months.

    (鹰)野外生长超过一年后被捕获并加以训练的。比较PASSAGE HAWK

    Compare with passage hawk
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We only got two in the nets, but what we lacked in quantity, we made for in quality - a passage goshawk and a haggard red-tailed hawk.
nounˈhæɡərdˈhaɡərd
  • A haggard hawk.

    野外生长一年以上被捕获并加以训练的鹰

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They interred her remains in a corner of the cabbage haggard.

Origin

Mid 16th century (used in falconry): from French hagard; perhaps related to hedge; later influenced by hag.

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更新时间:2024/11/8 22:18:18