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单词 sleazy
释义

Definition of sleazy in English:

sleazy

adjectivesleaziest, sleazier ˈsliːziˈslizi
  • 1(of a person or situation) sordid, corrupt, or immoral.

    a sleazy private detective
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He becomes embroiled in a kidnapping caper involving Debbie's sleazy agent, and Jean goes all the way to help Marva get her shot at fame.
    • She's the sort of no-nonsense girl who can nail those sleazy witnesses.
    • People must think I'm some sleazy bimbo at large in the world and your role is to fret about me and play the hero.
    • He meets an assortment of sleazy agents and producers and male prostitutes with hearts of gold.
    • You may challenge my ethics, call me a sleazy lawyer, but it is best for you.
    • I have been most successful when I have played sleazy people.
    • There's a lot of crazy ways to waste your money and a lot of sleazy people trying to take your money.
    • It's difficult not to appear as a sleazy slave dealer looking over the merchandise.
    • Country matters involve his mother's rather sleazy partner and his daughter Rosie, Felix's one-time girlfriend.
    • Professional catastrophe, which occurs both to Hugh and to Helen's sleazy father, is little more than an inconvenience to be sidestepped or diverted by trusted retainers.
    • He is completely embarrassed - he is not a sleazy person.
    • The applause for him drowned out whatever that sleazy guy at the end was ranting about.
    • A true and truly appalling story about sleazy people who saw what they wanted to until a decent judge lost his patience and blew a whistle.
    • He used people, he was sleazy and unreliable and he was not what you would call a nice person.
    • This time let's hope the media don't go down that sleazy road.
    • What I thought were decisions and loves that were mine and mine alone had been planted in my head by sleazy characters I could barely imagine.
    • He made no apologies for his rackety lifestyle, his liking for louche and even sleazy companions, his lavish consumption of cigars, brandy and champagne.
    • They were a bit more seedy and sleazy, which was what I liked.
    • Grace glared at the sleazy man that took her hand, as Nicholas and Henry walked off, now deeply engrossed in conversation.
    Synonyms
    corrupt, immoral, sordid, unsavoury, unpleasant, disreputable
    informal shady, sleazoid, sleazo
    1. 1.1 (of a place) squalid and seedy.
      a sleazy all-night cafe
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He went drinking and he usually goes to this sleazy place in Brooklyn.
      • Lautrec lived in the Montmartre section, the nightlife quarter of cabarets, cafes, restaurants, sleazy dance halls and brothels.
      • It was a grubby, grotty, sleazy, cruisy dive, but it had atmosphere, and we all loved it despite ourselves.
      • She drives a little pink car to her favourite sleazy punk places.
      • Nalirra isn't a low-class, sleazy place like Brandt or Quet, but prejudice is high there and people seem to be tightly wound and minor things tend to set them off.
      • What came as a shock later was his murder in the late '70s. Crane was found in a sleazy motel room, bludgeoned to death by a tripod.
      • A few of our cast make their way along a now quieting Calle Atocha toward the station, bypassing a few sleazy dives as they go.
      • I dipped into the heritage-soaked Latin Quarter and the bohemian - if sometimes sleazy - area of Montmartre.
      • He didn't want to buy into that cliche, although jazz did originate in rather sleazy places.
      • The town's main thoroughfare Duval Street, once borderline sleazy, is now rather smart and other quarters have been similarly refurbished.
      • Every Colombian city has a sleazy shopping district called a San Andresito where you can pick up a bottle of Scotch without paying those pesky import duties that double the price.
      • In the twisted world of this movie's story line, the young pimp is a good guy, and the mayor of its imaginary city is sleazy.
      • I won't say that our apartment was a dump, but it was pretty sleazy, featuring the tacky look of most cement-block constructions, although it did come with a big TV.
      • Throughout the whole film I couldn't help but think it was really a comedy despite the harsh realities of Melbourne's criminal and sleazy world.
      • He loved making a sleazy nightclub atmosphere: an excuse for expensive cigars and a lot of red wine.
      • However, Max is addled with a sacred sacrificial goat that he needs to deliver to a wedding in Yeoville, a sleazy suburb in Johannesburg.
      • Set in a sleazy modern red-light district, this garish, noisy production has plenty of style, but the play's disparity of substance has been emphasised, not reconciled.
      • We are dealing with Internet chat rooms: sleazy and unreliable, with no accountability.
      • His city is relentlessly sleazy and oppressive, and its cops apparently exist only to crack open the heads of innocent bystanders.
      Synonyms
      squalid, seedy, seamy, sordid, slummy, insalubrious, unpleasant, unprepossessing, mean, cheap, low-class, run down, down at heel
      informal scruffy, scuzzy, tacky, crummy, grungy, ratty
      British informal grotty
      North American informal skanky
  • 2dated (of textiles and clothing) flimsy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Plus the clothes here were perfectly fine, and I wasn't wasting my money on some sleazy outfit from some swanky store just for a date.
    • Monday night was another night of the fiddley diddley, where Sammy ensured he picked up a title with the sleazy shirt award.
    • The anarchic dirty rock group androgenously slip onto the stage, fully clad in sleazy scarves and leather trousers.

Derivatives

  • sleazily

  • adverbˈsliːzɪliˈslizəli
    • The former rages sleazily away, just on the right side of slack-jawed self-parody.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Phoenix grinned sleazily and advanced towards me again.
      • I felt heavy, demanding hands on my shoulders, that snaked their way sleazily down my arms.
      • The actor is frighteningly vivid as his sleazily insinuating character.
      • But no serving Conservative minister behaved as sleazily as this one has done.
  • sleaziness

  • nounˈsliːzɪnəsˈslizinəs
    • But this only masks the essential sleaziness of what he is doing, namely, giving an enormous favor to the industry that gave him his fortune.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's a highly sophisticated site which takes sex a million miles away from sleaziness.
      • In later years, Bernstein explained he didn't like the fact that jazz often was used on screen to suggest sleaziness.
      • Roxie's character had been cleaned up, but it was all done with a knowing wink that enabled audiences to relish the film's diverting sleaziness.
      • Both sides, in effect, associated politicians with self-serving sleaziness and corruption.

Origin

Mid 17th century: of unknown origin.

  • It was originally thin or flimsy fabrics that were sleazy, not nightclubs or bars. The familiar modern senses ‘squalid and seedy’ and ‘sordid, corrupt, or immoral’ did not develop until the 1940s, from the idea of cloth being cheap and poor-quality. The corresponding noun sleaze was created from sleazy in the 1960s.

Rhymes

breezy, cheesy, easy, easy-peasy, Kesey, Parcheesi, queasy, wheezy, Zambezi
 
 

Definition of sleazy in US English:

sleazy

adjectiveˈslēzēˈslizi
  • 1(of a person or situation) sordid, corrupt, or immoral.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He becomes embroiled in a kidnapping caper involving Debbie's sleazy agent, and Jean goes all the way to help Marva get her shot at fame.
    • I have been most successful when I have played sleazy people.
    • It's difficult not to appear as a sleazy slave dealer looking over the merchandise.
    • The applause for him drowned out whatever that sleazy guy at the end was ranting about.
    • What I thought were decisions and loves that were mine and mine alone had been planted in my head by sleazy characters I could barely imagine.
    • Country matters involve his mother's rather sleazy partner and his daughter Rosie, Felix's one-time girlfriend.
    • They were a bit more seedy and sleazy, which was what I liked.
    • People must think I'm some sleazy bimbo at large in the world and your role is to fret about me and play the hero.
    • You may challenge my ethics, call me a sleazy lawyer, but it is best for you.
    • Grace glared at the sleazy man that took her hand, as Nicholas and Henry walked off, now deeply engrossed in conversation.
    • A true and truly appalling story about sleazy people who saw what they wanted to until a decent judge lost his patience and blew a whistle.
    • Professional catastrophe, which occurs both to Hugh and to Helen's sleazy father, is little more than an inconvenience to be sidestepped or diverted by trusted retainers.
    • He is completely embarrassed - he is not a sleazy person.
    • There's a lot of crazy ways to waste your money and a lot of sleazy people trying to take your money.
    • This time let's hope the media don't go down that sleazy road.
    • He made no apologies for his rackety lifestyle, his liking for louche and even sleazy companions, his lavish consumption of cigars, brandy and champagne.
    • She's the sort of no-nonsense girl who can nail those sleazy witnesses.
    • He meets an assortment of sleazy agents and producers and male prostitutes with hearts of gold.
    • He used people, he was sleazy and unreliable and he was not what you would call a nice person.
    Synonyms
    corrupt, immoral, sordid, unsavoury, unpleasant, disreputable
    1. 1.1 (of a place) squalid and seedy.
      a sleazy all-night cafe
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Nalirra isn't a low-class, sleazy place like Brandt or Quet, but prejudice is high there and people seem to be tightly wound and minor things tend to set them off.
      • I won't say that our apartment was a dump, but it was pretty sleazy, featuring the tacky look of most cement-block constructions, although it did come with a big TV.
      • However, Max is addled with a sacred sacrificial goat that he needs to deliver to a wedding in Yeoville, a sleazy suburb in Johannesburg.
      • What came as a shock later was his murder in the late '70s. Crane was found in a sleazy motel room, bludgeoned to death by a tripod.
      • A few of our cast make their way along a now quieting Calle Atocha toward the station, bypassing a few sleazy dives as they go.
      • His city is relentlessly sleazy and oppressive, and its cops apparently exist only to crack open the heads of innocent bystanders.
      • He loved making a sleazy nightclub atmosphere: an excuse for expensive cigars and a lot of red wine.
      • Throughout the whole film I couldn't help but think it was really a comedy despite the harsh realities of Melbourne's criminal and sleazy world.
      • It was a grubby, grotty, sleazy, cruisy dive, but it had atmosphere, and we all loved it despite ourselves.
      • The town's main thoroughfare Duval Street, once borderline sleazy, is now rather smart and other quarters have been similarly refurbished.
      • He didn't want to buy into that cliche, although jazz did originate in rather sleazy places.
      • Set in a sleazy modern red-light district, this garish, noisy production has plenty of style, but the play's disparity of substance has been emphasised, not reconciled.
      • We are dealing with Internet chat rooms: sleazy and unreliable, with no accountability.
      • She drives a little pink car to her favourite sleazy punk places.
      • Lautrec lived in the Montmartre section, the nightlife quarter of cabarets, cafes, restaurants, sleazy dance halls and brothels.
      • In the twisted world of this movie's story line, the young pimp is a good guy, and the mayor of its imaginary city is sleazy.
      • He went drinking and he usually goes to this sleazy place in Brooklyn.
      • I dipped into the heritage-soaked Latin Quarter and the bohemian - if sometimes sleazy - area of Montmartre.
      • Every Colombian city has a sleazy shopping district called a San Andresito where you can pick up a bottle of Scotch without paying those pesky import duties that double the price.
      Synonyms
      squalid, seedy, seamy, sordid, slummy, insalubrious, unpleasant, unprepossessing, mean, cheap, low-class, run down, down at heel
  • 2dated (of textiles and clothing) flimsy.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The anarchic dirty rock group androgenously slip onto the stage, fully clad in sleazy scarves and leather trousers.
    • Plus the clothes here were perfectly fine, and I wasn't wasting my money on some sleazy outfit from some swanky store just for a date.
    • Monday night was another night of the fiddley diddley, where Sammy ensured he picked up a title with the sleazy shirt award.

Origin

Mid 17th century: of unknown origin.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 13:50:25