[
US
/ˈfɑɡi/
]
[ UK /fˈɒɡi/ ]
[ UK /fˈɒɡi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- stunned or confused and slow to react (as from blows or drunkenness or exhaustion)
-
obscured by fog
he could barely see through the fogged window -
filled or abounding with fog or mist
a brumous October morning -
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