[ UK /smˈʌti/ ]
[ US /ˈsməˌti/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. characterized by obscenity
    had a filthy mouth
    smutty jokes
    foul language
  2. soiled with dirt or soot
    his shirt was black within an hour
    with feet black from playing outdoors
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How To Use smutty In A Sentence

  • Like all successful infomercials he uses sexual desire to sell his product, with the animators relishing in the opportunity to create smutty and suggestive scenes.
  • But when you consider the levels of intoxication and the students' smutty fratboy humour, nothing is so certain.
  • The lyrics to this very hummable song are extremely naughty, not smutty or crude, just enjoyably naughty.
  • The problem with every generation as they get older is to view their own childhood through rose-coloured spectacles and state quite narrow-mindedly that this current generation is smutty, disrespectful and crass.
  • Yes, you'd better not meddle with the darkies if you don't want your fingers smutted, Miss Anne; for young ladies with smutty fingers, don't succeed in society very well, you'd much better attend to your fineries, and exert your superfluous reformatory energies upon one of those marvellous structures which you call a bonnet, and I call a coal-scuttle. Sister Anne's Vocation.
  • Pushing 60 but still displaying the sensibility of a naughty schoolboy, Waters displays a real penchant for smutty innuendo and an ever growing catalogue of euphemisms.
  • I don't like smutty talk. The Sun
  • Lest anyone get the wrong idea, it is also made clear that there is to be strictly no sexual harassment of fellow guests and no smutty behaviour in communal areas.
  • A couple of the younger teachers tittered at his smutty jokes.
  • No low-down, filthy, kinky behaviour, or even smutty talk.
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