How To Use Cragged In A Sentence

  • At the age of ninety, Kennan published Around the Cragged Hill (WW Norton, 1994).
  • The return is via the black cragged gash of Gleann Lochain Eanaiche.
  • We finally reached the 17,300-foot pass overlooking Lhamo Latso - "a sharp cragged ridge," according to The Power-Places of Central Tibet, "upon which is built the Dalai Lama's throne."
  • Scotland still had their chances and on 59 minutes De Marigny was scragged by Ally Hogg and the Italian No.10 held on too long.
  • So while other girls were bobbed and waved, I had my mouse-coloured hair scragged back into a thick pigtail which made my compulsorily worn school hat ride up at the back.
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  • I saw one group of traders run off like a startled herd, while three police, like a pack of hunting dogs, scragged the least nimble.
  • His father wavered behind the bar, his thick white hair matted on his scalp, his face cragged and lined like dried-out leaves.
  • Kristofferson's face is like an Easter Island statue; cragged and heavy with tragic knowledge.
  • By 8pm there's a definite sense of expectation, and so I follow the reds, whites and blues (so much for separatism) up the cragged streets to cafe-lined Place Jaurs.
  • Friesland, which is a very high and cragged land, and was almost clean covered with snow, so that we might see nought but craggy rocks and the tops of high and huge hills, sometimes (and for the most part) all covered with foggy mists. Voyages in Search of the North-West Passage
  • He stared straight up at us through ages of charred skin, sun baked to the brownest of browns and cragged with lines and chasms of life, which had left ages of toil squinting through slit eyes as he looked up at us and broadly smiled. Mexico compared to what?
  • The wanderer ventured forth into the eternal pass of cragged rock, worn with lines of age, yet stalwart and strong with thick trunks of stone bolstering the walls.
  • At 63, the Paisley-born actor-turned-novelist's cragged, open face alludes to, but never exposes, his 60-plus status.
  • Across the water an ancient stone keep sat atop cragged rocky shores, reflected in the cerulean blue waters.
  • As we got closer, a face so old and cragged with such deep wrinkles they looked like sun-baked crevasses formed by thousand of years of standing in the wind and rain. Guanajuato restaurants
  • Again the Australian referee courted controversy when he seemed to indicate a Scottish penalty advantage but gave none when Blair was duly scragged by the green jerseys.
  • The river breaks on cragged rocks, sighs its mists into a callous sky of heat and warped glass. Blood Quantum
  • Dafoe's character doesn't say much, but his cragged face is as expressive a tool as his voice.
  • Cragged edges, haunting facades and fascinating back stories, all things that combine to produce the compellingly beautiful ruined castles of England - whose green and pleasant land is veritably pock-marked with such historical sites. Historvius: 14 Picturesque English Castle Ruins
  • The pageant device itself was made up of the representation of two hills or mountains, the one on the north side being "cragged, barreyn, and stonye; in whiche was erected one tree, artificiallye made, all withered and deadde ...".
  • While Robert Shaw's Britisher sneers at all things NYC, Matthau's cragged face and forlorn voice implicitly champion NYC values.
  • At the age of ninety, Kennan published Around the Cragged Hill.
  • Our No 8 Jim Bell had scragged him on the line as he had tried to kick the ball clear, but it fell straight on the floor, so I dived on it to score.
  • He was scragged by two players, disappeared under a heap of bodies, but emerged from the bottom of the ensuing ruck none the worse for wear.
  • The wanderer ventured forth into the eternal pass of cragged rock, worn with lines of age, yet stalwart and strong with thick trunks of stone bolstering the walls.
  • As we got closer, a face so old and cragged with such deep wrinkles they looked like sun-baked crevasses formed by thousand of years of standing in the wind and rain. Guanajuato restaurants
  • I saw one group of traders run off like a startled herd, humping their bags of bags, while three police, like a pack of hunting dogs, scragged the least nimble.

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