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leathered

ADJECTIVE
  1. resembling or made to resemble leather; tough but pliable

How To Use leathered In A Sentence

  • The Father Blake, of whom Andy spoke, was more familiarly known by the name of Father Phil, by which title Andy himself would have named him, had he been telling how Father Phil cleared a fair, or equally "leathered" both the belligerent parties in a faction-fight, or turned out the contents (or malcontents) of a public-house at an improper hour; but when he spoke of his Reverence respecting ghostly matters, the importance of the subject begot higher consideration for the man, and the familiar Handy Andy, Volume 2 — a Tale of Irish Life
  • Usually on a day off, I get leathered.
  • What is it about exercise that provokes the desire to get leathered?
  • Their skin was brown and leathered with age, and two pointed ears poked through the messy brown hair on each of their heads. Master of Mirrors
  • The interior is like something from the pages of a Vogue home furnishings magazine with soft, muted greys making up the fascia, split with a polished grey birch decorative inlay and a chromed and leathered bespoke interior.
  • Paul Lambert leathered a low effort wide of the post.
  • The woman laughed, shook out her hair and waved a leathered hand in the air.
  • Their work-worn hands and leathered faces illustrate just how tough their job is.
  • He sounds like he's absolutely leathered, too.
  • He doesn't really look bush-ready, nor does he boast the leathered skin of a man who spends his life in the outdoors.
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