[
UK
/dˌɪsɐɹˈeɪndʒd/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
having the arrangement disturbed; not in order
her disarranged hair
How To Use disarranged In A Sentence
- The experiments of the later nineteenth century blur this fundamental distinction: ‘In our day prose style has become somewhat disarranged.’
- Her face is mottled with wrath, her bandeaux of hair are disarranged upon her forehead, the ornaments of her cap, cheap, and dirty, and numerous, only give her a wilder appearance. The Newcomes
- His hair was totally astray, his clothes looked somewhat disarranged, he was staggering as if he was even more drunk then he was in reality, drooling and he seemed to have something in his mouth.
- It didn't come down, but everything in the room was disarranged.
- Both sides were closed off by large, steel mesh fences with barbed wire at the top, curling around the top support pole in a disarranged, uninviting pattern.
- In his sleep he seemed so young and vulnerable, his dark hair disarranged around his face like an errant schoolboy's, his lips fluttering uncertainly every so often as if he was speaking to someone in his dreams.
- Both sides were closed off by large, steel mesh fences with barbed wire at the top, curling around the top support pole in a disarranged, uninviting pattern.
- Her head was in constant pain and her clothes were dirty and disarranged.
- Moreover, some chlorophyll and a few inner membranes still persisted, although these latter were disarranged, lacking essential protein components and devoid of photosynthetic function.
- It's a dark relic of a space, atmosphered Thursday evening in murky stage-mist, the middle of its floor weirdly disarranged with a collection of sinister objects. Rodney Punt: The Mortal Thoughts of Lady Macbeth: A Chamber Opera of Horrors at Fais Do-Do