What is another word for frayed?

Pronunciation: [fɹˈe͡ɪd] (IPA)

The word "frayed" is often used to describe something that is worn out or tattered at the edges. However, there are many synonyms that can be used to describe a similar situation. These include words such as ragged, threadbare, worn, shabby, torn, scratched, damaged, and weathered. Each of these words emphasizes a different aspect of wear and tear, such as the extent of damage or the manner in which it was sustained. By using a variety of synonyms, writers can create more vivid and nuanced descriptions of the condition of objects, clothing, or other materials.

Synonyms for Frayed:

What are the paraphrases for Frayed?

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What are the hypernyms for Frayed?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for frayed?

Frayed is an adjective that means torn or worn out due to age, use, or excessive exposure. The antonyms for frayed are a combination of words that convey the opposite of its definition. These words include new, smooth, unspoiled, unworn, undamaged, pristine, refined, polished, spotless, and spot-free. New refers to the opposite of frayed since it means recently created or introduced to a particular place or area. Smooth also contrasts frayed as it refers to something that is free from roughness, and is even in texture. Pristine and spotless refer to something that is clean and without any mark, crack, or blemish. These antonyms provide a contrast to the state of being frayed.

What are the antonyms for Frayed?

Usage examples for Frayed

From among them he picked up the thing he sought and sat on the edge of his bed with it in his hands, turning it over and regarding it, tieing and untieing the worn, frayed, but still bright ribbons, which had once been the cherry-colored hair ribbons of little Betty Ballard.
"The Eye of Dread"
Payne Erskine
Peter was sorry to observe on a closer view that his tail-coat was frayed and his collar not very clean.
"Fortitude"
Hugh Walpole
His straw hat and linen suit were very old and frayed and his shoes were of canvas with rope soles.
"Command"
William McFee

Famous quotes with Frayed

  • Christmas is a holiday that persecutes the lonely, the frayed, and the rejected.
    Jimmy Cannon
  • Mark Satin ... looks and sounds just like a boy many a citizen of Wichita Falls, Tex., would love to give a good spanking to. He has long hair. ... He has a yellow button announcing DISSENT in the lapel of his rumpled jacket. Dissent is certainly what he is about, and he has had a great chance to exercise it since he joined SUPA last month as a $25-a-week counselor for draft emigrants from the United States. "That godawful sick, foul country; could anything be worse?" he asks, his frayed sleeve bumping against a loaf of sliced bread on the desk. ("My breakfast and lunch," he explains apologetically.)
    Mark Satin
  • "It is of course a magic carpet." Abdullah had heard that one before. He bowed over his tucked-up hands. "Many and various are the virtues said to reside in carpets," he agreed. "Which one does the poet of the sands claim for this? Does it welcome a man home to his tent? Does it bring peace to the hearth? Or maybe," he said, poking the frayed edge suggestively with one toe, "it is said to never wear out?"
    Diana Wynne Jones
  • Went for a walk, whistling. Saw a throne in a window. I said: What chair is this? Is it the one great Ferdinand sat in, when he sent the ships to find the Indies? The seat is frayed. Hardly a day passes without an announcement of some kind of marriage, a pregnancy, a cancer, a rebirth. Sometimes they drift in from the Yukon and other far places, come in and sit down at the kitchen table, want a glass of milk and a peanut-butter-and-jelly, I oblige, for old times’ sake. Sent me the schedule for the Little League soccer teams, they’re all named after cars, the Mustangs vs. the Mavericks, the Chargers vs. the Impalas. Something funny about that. My son. Slept with What’s-Her-Name, they said, while she was asleep, I don’t think that’s fair. Prone and helpless in the glare of the headlights. They went away, then they came back, at Christmas and Eastertide, had quite a full table, maybe a dozen in all including all the little...partners they’d picked up on their travels....
    Donald Barthelme
  • In the morning when we began straggling out in small parties on our way to the trial, several of us went down in the elevator with three entirely correct old gentlemen looking much alike in their sleekness, pinkness, baldness, glossiness of grooming, such stereotypes as no proletarian novelist of the time would have dared to use as the example of a capitalist monster in his novel. We were pale and tightfaced; our eyelids were swollen; no doubt in spite of hot coffee and cold baths, we looked rumpled, unkempt, disreputable, discredited, vaguely guilty, pretty well frayed out by then. The gentlemen regarded us glossily, then turned to each other. As we descended the many floors in silence, one of them said to the others in a cream-cheese voice, "It is very pleasant to know we may expect things to settle down properly again," and the others nodded with wise, smug, complacent faces. To this day, I can feel again my violent desire just to slap his whole slick face all over at once, hard, with the flat of my hand, or better, some kind of washing bat or any useful domestic appliance being applied where it would really make an impression — a butter paddle — something he would feel through that smug layer of too-well-fed fat.
    Katherine Anne Porter

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