flea-ridden
See also: flearidden
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
flea-ridden (comparative more flea-ridden, superlative most flea-ridden)
- Infested with fleas.
- 1861, Edward Dicey, Rome in 1860, London: Macmillan, Chapter 14, pp. 207-208,
- Two or three times a week a sort of Italian eil-wagen, a funereal and tumble-down, flea-ridden coach, with windows boarded up so high that, when seated, you cannot see out of them, and closed hermetically, after Italian fashion, shambles along at jog-trot pace between the two towns, and takes a livelong day, from early morning to late at night, to perform the journey.
- 1913, D. K. Broster and G. W. Taylor, The Vision Splendid, London: John Murray, Book II, Chapter 15 (1),
- He threw Dormer the paper, stooped to pat the flea-ridden puppy of the hotel, and went in.
- 2002, David Wyllie (translator), The War with the Newts (1936) by Karel Čapek, Book One, Chapter I,
- “Tell them, then, that if they don't go...I’ll knock all their teeth out...I’ll tear their ears off...I’ll hang the lot of them...and that I'll burn down their entire flea-ridden village. Understand?”
- 1861, Edward Dicey, Rome in 1860, London: Macmillan, Chapter 14, pp. 207-208,
- Mangy; filthy.
Synonyms
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