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manky

[ UK /mˈæŋki/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. inferior and worthless

How To Use manky In A Sentence

  • I had to comb the shops for two days until I finally found one in Huntly - a manky, mottled looking thing, with the skin of a toad.
  • His thin hair is manky and he scratches his head, buffing it raw. WHITE LIES
  • In pristine condition it looks campily flashy; distressed it becomes manky. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, if only somebody would do something about those manky, shabby, urban foxes which keep trashing my dustbin.
  • Yup, that's right, that spunky young bin man whose YouTube rap sensation condemns the health secretary, Andrew Lansley born in 1956, as a "grey-haired manky old codger" is cutting short his lifespan just as surely as if he were sucking on a crack pipe while leaping Becher's Brook. You're Looking Very Well by Lewis Wolpert – review
  • Other than that, I've mostly been sitting at home, writing and coughing, courtesy of the manky lurgy that's going round at the moment that lingered for nearly a month.
  • An ageing weirdo is breeding spiders in his manky old shack.
  • I've managed to get them pretty manky from time to time and a spin through the washing machine brings them up as good as new.
  • His thin hair is manky and he scratches his head, buffing it raw. WHITE LIES
  • Having completed the painting and got hardly any orange paint in my hair, I took a long hard look and realised that the kitchen tiles looked manky.
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