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  1. Dictionary
    dusty
    /ˈdʌsti/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. adjective. uk / ˈdʌs.ti / us / ˈdʌs.ti / Add to word list. B1. covered in dust: Piles of dusty books lay on the floor. We drove along the dusty road. slightly grey in colour: dusty pink. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Dirty & untidy. all over the place idiom. Augean. besmeared. bespattered. bloodied.

  3. The meaning of DUSTY is covered or abounding with dust. How to use dusty in a sentence.

  4. Dusty definition: filled, covered, or clouded with or as with dust. . See examples of DUSTY used in a sentence.

  5. 5 meanings: 1. covered with or involving dust 2. like dust in appearance or colour 3. (of a colour) tinged with grey; pale 4. →.... Click for more definitions.

  6. Definition of dusty adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. When you call something dusty, it's either literally covered in dust or so old and unoriginal that it might as well be. You can use a feather duster to clean off dusty surfaces, but if something is a dusty color, that just means it's got a grayish tint to it, like dusty pink or dusty blue.

  8. dusty. ( ˈdʌstɪ) adj, dustier or dustiest. 1. covered with or involving dust. 2. like dust in appearance or colour. 3. (Colours) (of a colour) tinged with grey; pale: dusty pink. 4. a dusty answer an unhelpful or bad-tempered reply. 5. not so dusty informal not too bad; fairly well: often in response to the greeting how are you? ˈdustily adv.

  9. If places, roads, or other things outside are dusty, they are covered with tiny bits of earth or sand, usually because it has not rained for a long time. They started strolling down the dusty road in the moonlight.

  10. Jun 2, 2024 · dusty (comparative dustier, superlative dustiest) A dusty road in Kenya (1) Covered with dust.

  11. Origin of Dusty. From Middle English dusty, dusti, from Old English dūstiġ, dystiġ, dȳstiġ (“dusty”), equivalent to dust +‎ -y. Cognate with Dutch donzig (“cottony, downy, woolly”), German dunstig (“hazy, misty”).