[
UK
/hˈæɡəd/
]
[ US /ˈhæɡɝd/ ]
[ US /ˈhæɡɝd/ ]
NOUN
- British writer noted for romantic adventure novels (1856-1925)
How To Use Haggard In A Sentence
- The uncluttered arrangements make a perfect fit with Haggard's direct and soulful singing - an object lesson all round.
- The kings of the heartogram didn't fail to impress, with a diverse crowd gathered, including everyone from young punks to soccer moms and even a haggard old bat dancing around in lingerie.
- Phoenix, for so Peter had dubbed the haggard in memory of his and Jenny's first discussion of the bennu hieroglyph in the Egyptian Museum, had known the ecstasy of freedom and had a look about her that definitely said she preferred the wild to captivity. From This Beloved Hour
- The image jitters, there is a thump as the sound comes on, and a haggard, hair-covered face fills the frame.
- De Havilland's poised, elegant Miriam is the perfect foil for haggard, wild-eyed Charlotte.
- Yes, Stephen had all the symptoms, what the doctors called the "diathesis," or look of consumption: nearly transparent skin, through which blue veins could be seen ticking, and a haggard face and a cavernous, wheezing chest. ‘Hotel de Dream: A New York Novel’
- Severe vomiting, diarrhoea, rectal tenesmus: unable to keep standing, she urinates under herself; the pupils are dilated, the eyes haggard; complete mind-blindness, near-total failure of reflexes, deep unconsciousness, breathing dyspneic, heart-beat faint and very fast, pulse barely perceptible; dead in thirty-six hours. Charles Richet - Nobel Lecture
- Coulter is a haggard looking CON watching the Republican party go down the shidder. Propeller Most Popular Stories
- Kalifornia aside, the talented young star has done nothing to deserve such harsh comments, although her head shot is indeed “haggardly.” Y.P.R.: I Am Going to Die Alone
- My maturity or my haggard face. Times, Sunday Times