0 unpleasantly thin, often with bones showing:
1 (of a person’s or animal’s body) very thin because not fed enough, so that you can see the shape of the bones under the skin:
There is always a tendency to try to fashion out of a fairly scrawny acorn a massive constitutional oak.
By contemporary standards, the grass-fed cattle are rather scrawny, as fattening them up on corn had not become general practice.
The yard was mostly dirt, good for playing marbles - with a few spare patches of scrawny grass.
Guybrush, although portrayed as an attractive lad in closeups, is a scrawny blonde youth with minimal amounts of courage, intelligence and charisma.
There had been a terrible drought that year and the shortages meant the cattle were weak and scrawny.
The horse occupies the centre of the scene, with its ribs well visible and a scrawny head showing teeth and the tongue.
The decreased appetite will result in individuals appear scrawny, mangy, and sickly.
In one way he was just a scrawny little kid.
中文繁体
瘦骨嶙峋的,皮包骨的…
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瘦骨嶙峋的,皮包骨头的…
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flaco/ca [masculine-feminine, singular], flacucho/cha [masculine-feminine…
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sıska, bir deri bir kemik, iskelet gibi…
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décharné/-ée, décharné…
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vychrtlý…
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afpillet…
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kurus kering…
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