From <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span> + -ness. <span class="searchmatch">draggledness</span> (uncountable) The quality of being <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>. 1923, Walter de la Mare, Seaton's Aunt: There was a pathetic look of...
of the last birds to be shot; a black-and-white snapshot of a bird from a Scottish estate, <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>, stuffed and glassy-eyed. <span class="searchmatch">draggledness</span> undraggled...
From un- + <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>. undraggled (not comparable) Not <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>....
draggles, present participle draggling, simple past and past participle <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>) To make, or to become, wet and muddy by dragging along the ground. 1844...
170: All their ribandry and gauzery — their silkery and velvetry — were <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>, and limp, and shapeless […] 1967, Richard S. Prather, Gat Heat, page 108:...
N.Y.: Cassell and Company, published 1911, →OCLC: London died away in <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span> taverns and dreary scrubs, and then was unaccountably born again in blazing...
wore light clothes, as most blondes will, and appeared, in preference, in <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span> sea-green, or slatternly sky-blue. 1886 January 5, Robert Louis Stevenson...
Trivia, or The Art of Walking the Streets of London[4]: You'll see a <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span> damsel / From Billingsgate her fishy traffic bear. 5 o'clock traffic advanced...
page 224: We did but keep you surety for our son, / If this be he, — or a <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span> mawkin, thou, / That tends her bristled grunters in the sludge[.] (now...
Montgomery, “A Sandshore Wooing”, in Short Stories: 1902-1903: My dress was <span class="searchmatch">draggled</span>, my hat had slipped back, and the kinks and curls of my obstreperous hair...