Synonyms for blurry


Grammar : Adj
Spell : blur-ee
Phonetic Transcription : ˈblɜr i


Définition of blurry

Origin :
  • 1855, from blur + -y (2). Related: Blurrily; blurriness.
  • adj hazy
Example sentences :
  • She was so pitifully inclined toward Sophie that her eyes were blurry.
  • Extract from : « Find the Woman » by Arthur Somers Roche
  • Then Aunt Tilly looked up and her specs were all blurry and wet.
  • Extract from : « Back Home » by Irvin S. Cobb
  • Why, I reckon a keb-horse could give her three stone and win in a blurry canter, I do.
  • Extract from : « The Vanity Girl » by Compton Mackenzie
  • There was a blurry shimmer on the wooden plate beside the suitcase.
  • Extract from : « Ham Sandwich » by James H. Schmitz
  • Came a general nodding and agreement of soft, blurry voices.
  • Extract from : « Birthright » by T.S. Stribling
  • Do not cut the “U” down too close to the barrel, as it will then give you a blurry aim, especially when the barrel gets hot.
  • Extract from : « Automatic Pistol Shooting » by Walter Winans
  • He did this several times, each inking making an ugly, blurry figure that completely ruined two or three pages of the book.
  • Extract from : « Four Little Blossoms at Oak Hill School » by Mabel C. Hawley
  • The snow and mud in the yard below him showed a tangle of blurry tracks enlarged by yesterday's melting.
  • Extract from : « Wilderness of Spring » by Edgar Pangborn
  • The picture was a blurry representation of something unreal made for an unimaginable purpose, under abnormal conditions.
  • Extract from : « Creatures of the Abyss » by Murray Leinster
  • In a blurry easterly squall of sleet that night, Donald saw one of them “giving her main-sheet” for home.
  • Extract from : « The Viking Blood » by Frederick William Wallace

Antonyms for blurry

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019