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general::
adj. VERBS be, look, seem | become, get I've got more untidy since I stopped going out to work. | remain, stay I'm afraid the house will have to stay untidy for now. | leave sth, make sth My son had left the studio very untidy. Books and magazines lying around make the place very untidy. ADV. dreadfully, extremely, very Everything was dreadfully untidy. | a bit, a little, rather
Oxford Collocations Dictionary
2
general::
place
untidy
British English not tidy – used especially when things have not been put back in their correct place:
• an untidy bedroom • an untidy desk • The house was cramped and untidy.
messy
untidy or dirty. American people use this word instead of untidy . British people use this word, but it sounds less formal than untidy:
• a messy kitchen • You've made the table all messy.
be a mess
( also be in a mess British English ) informal to be very untidy or dirty:
• The whole house is in a mess, but I didn’t have time to clean it up. • Sorry everything’s such a mess.
cluttered
untidy because there are too many things in a small space:
• She gazed around the cluttered kitchen. • The office was cluttered with books. • Her desk was too cluttered.
unkempt
untidy and not well-looked after – used about gardens or land:
• unkempt lawns • They walked into a wild and unkempt garden. • an unkempt plot in the cemetery
be a pigsty/pit
informal used when saying that a place is very untidy and dirty, and someone should clean it:
• This place is a pigsty! Clean it up. • I don’t know how you can stand living in a pigsty like this. • My room’s a total pit, but I’m too lazy to clean it.
person
untidy
British English an untidy person does not do things in a neat way, for example they leave things lying around instead of putting them back in the correct place. Also used about someone's appearance, when they do not comb their hair, take care of their clothes etc:
• She was always very untidy – her clothes lay on the floor where she had dropped them. • He had obviously been sleeping; his hair was untidy and his chin unshaven.
messy
untidy or dirty. American people use this word instead of untidy . British people use this word, but it sounds less formal than untidy:
• You've made my hair all messy. • a messy eater
scruffy
British English wearing old and untidy clothes:
• My parents think I look scruffy in these jeans, but I like them. • She’s wearing that scruffy old sweater again.
slovenly
especially written untidy and lazy:
• The servants were old and slovenly. • his slovenly appearance • The work was done in a slow, slovenly way.
bedraggled
used when someone looks untidy because they have got wet or dirty:
• A rather bedraggled crowd waited outside in the pouring rain. • The children walked along the path, looking miserable and bedraggled.
dishevelled
British English , disheveled American English if someone's hair or clothes look dishevelled, they look untidy, for example because they have just been in bed or in a windy place:
• Her hair was uncombed and her clothes were dishevelled. • a dishevelled old man • The singer was photographed looking ill and dishevelled.
unkempt
especially written if someone has unkempt hair or an unkempt appearance, they look untidy and have not been taking care of the way they look:
• a rough-looking youth with long black unkempt hair • The man looked tired and unkempt.
slob
noun [ countable ] informal someone who is extremely untidy but does not seem to care that they are:
• Jo’s such a slob – how can you live like that? • If you keep dressing like a slob, no one’s ever going to ask you for a date.
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