seedy造句31. That accounts for your always looking so seedy.
32. He felt [ looked ] seedy.
33. They suck you in to their seedy world.
34. He found his brother in a seedy, roach-infested apartment.
35. Because we'd done two hours on this peroxide never-was, passing apparently from some kind of drug overdose in some seedy hotel room in Florida.
36. His empire includes perhaps Macau's best-known casino, the Lisboa, which these days has the seedy air of a down-at-heel Blackpool nightclub.
37. This wildly propulsive novel by the acclaimed author of A Wild Sheep Chase focuses on a man searching for a former lover who vanished mysteriously from a seedy hotel.
38. Many North Americans are familiar with CD - ROMs, but not with seedy Roms.
39. The book includes some memorably seedy characters and scabrous description.
40. The once dapper , cheerful agent had become seedy looking and bitter.
41. In films, we always see the tarot seedy parlor or back room.
42. You look unwell ( seedy ) , and your eyes are bloodshot.
43. In English brothels you shuffle into a seedy room so dim you can only meet the girl by Braille.
44. Frank drifted into running dodgy errands for a seedy local villain.
45. Boutiques sell organic yogurt and chic secondhand furniture next to seedy stores stocked with cut-price liquor and junk food.
46. Methods I. indigotica was sampled at a fixed period. At each stage, the growth of seedling and root system was recorded, blooming and seedy condition was recorded in efflorescence .
47. Adelson & 39 ; s dream was Macau? formerly known for its dark, seedy casinos and violent underworld.
48. Freddie Shepherd - Gets photographed in a seedy titty bar with snake and jokes to snake about how Newcastle birds are all ugly.
49. Fruit medium, heart shaped tuberculate , flesh yellow, seedy, very sweet.
50. The normal stool of a breastfed baby is yellow and loose (soft to runny) and may be seedy or curdy .
51. For thousand years or more the Japanese had lived like seedy caretakers watching over precious jewels.
52. Many drivers — strung out from the long desert slog — prefer to push through the night rather than staying in the seedy roadside inns that serve up young prostitutes as cheaply as mugs of millet beer.