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[ US /ˈfɑɡi/ ]
[ UK /fˈɒɡi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. stunned or confused and slow to react (as from blows or drunkenness or exhaustion)
  2. obscured by fog
    he could barely see through the fogged window
  3. filled or abounding with fog or mist
    a brumous October morning
  4. indistinct or hazy in outline
    a landscape of blurred outlines
    the trees were just blurry shapes

How To Use foggy In A Sentence

  • OK, the steering is a little foggy, but the wheel unquestionably feels pleasant under the fingers. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'd have been content to wait out the weather in my tent, but Ron consulted his topo map and we headed off, marching along a streambed into foggy nothingness, south toward the foothills.
  • It was a quiet, dark night, foggy and drizzling with rain.
  • ROBERTS: Well, from New England all the way down south, it's just one of those foggy, kind of drizzly days. CNN Transcript May 6, 2009
  • We can guarantee the punctual arrival of the armoured cars in foggy weather.
  • Michael was hardly able to think straight as he started to feel the effects of the pills, his vision foggy, and his mind a total mess.
  • While this is not always true, it does exist here and it adds another layer of foggy, depersonalized confusion as to who and watch we are watching.
  • There were just 11 people in the church on their foggy wedding day. Times, Sunday Times
  • I was afraid you might point out inconsistencies, because my memory is a bit foggy, but hey let's call it artistic freedom, right? Belle's story part 1
  • The weather was foggy, damp and horrible. The Sun
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