[
US
/ˈboʊni/
]
[ UK /bˈəʊni/ ]
[ UK /bˈəʊni/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
being very thin
pale bony hands
a long scrawny neck
a child with skinny freckled legs -
having bones especially many or prominent bones
bony fish
a bony shad fillet
her bony wrist
How To Use boney In A Sentence
- They are particularly keen on the Necropolis, the old boneyard that sprawls across the boundary between city centre and east end.
- The woman and I walked down the road between the boneyard and the nuthouse this morning and headed into the garden allotments.
- Before any more instruments join in, Mr. Malo, who possesses a sulfurously rich voice, murmurs one word and carries it for seven beats: "Siboney. Aerosmith vs. Matthews: Jaded Geezers Rule!
- Nurses triaged Mama through cause they saw she looked like she was skirting the boneyard. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
- Cuba was originally inhabited by two Native American tribes: the hunter - gatherer Ciboney, and the agricultural Taino.
- Trace the ulna down the side of your forearm to where it ends, a boney prominence above the wrist.
- There is no boneyard in this game; any leftover tiles are put aside and left face down.
- Milton Freidman is one most likely to self-identify as a libertarian at Hoover as he had his nose firmly planted up Ayn Rand’s boney little ass when he was a young pupster .. Think Progress » Bush Meets Privately With Think Tank Promoting Military Strike On Iran
- The Arawaks -- who originated in Venezuela and gradually migrated up the chain of islands now called the Lesser Antilles -- succeeded the Siboney. Undefined
- Downtown, neon treasures from a bygone era were stored in a dusty field called the Neon Boneyard.