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"dullish" Definitions
  1. somewhat dull

18 Sentences With "dullish"

How to use dullish in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dullish" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dullish". Mastering all the usages of "dullish" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"That was a good take," Coley says after a dullish run-through is interrupted.
" It endorsed Mr. Cordray, who it described as "careful and dullish" and not "a stirring campaigner, to say the least.
Country music has been clogged with dullish gentlemen for the last few years, and while Morris recorded some of the genre's most promising music, some good it did her.
Abandoning vanity, she dyed her hair a dullish brown, close to her natural color, left her crow's feet unconcealed by makeup, donned what she has described as "my tragic little housedress," and showed off the extra pounds she'd gained.
Yes, the nutrient- and- hormone-rich organ that connects the fetus to the uterine wall (and that some people, like Kourtney Kardashian, turn into supplements), is the hero ingredient in my favorite serum — part of a newly launched line by oculoplastic surgeon and facial aesthetics doctor Maryam Zamani, MD. Ovine and plant placenta stem cells are at the heart of MZ Skin's Rest & Revive Night Serum, an ultra-light, moisture-boosting formula that stimulates collagen and elastin and has made my dullish, reddish winter skin look brighter and healthier — like I haven't been boozing harder than ever this month and snacking on sugar gummies as I type this — in a mere two weeks' time.
The species are generally similar, with small, conical scales on their dorsal surfaces, with overall dullish coloration, and a pattern of distinct transverse bands.
Clusters of dullish red flowers, contrasted by white styles, are presented at the leaf axis in the austral autumn or winter. The plant is successfully grown in the urbanised sub-coastal regions of southern Australia. The most common subspecies in cultivation is H. petiolaris subsp. trichophylla.
The northern subspecies, Butler's Corella (Cacatua pastinator butleri), are a smaller bird with adults in length and weighing up to . The bill is a dullish grey white, the legs are dark grey and the upper mandible has a long tip.Johnstone, R.J., Storr, G.M. (1998). Handbook of Western Australian Birds.
The maggots were approximately 6-7 mm length-wise and 1-1.5 mm in width and appeared a dullish-white in color. Their carcasses were coated with a tough integument consisting of multiple bands of minute, grayish-brown spines. Closer examination with a microscope revealed a total of 11 separate segments.
Two eggs are laid, white or dullish whitish-brown or pink dotted with purplish-brown spots. As far as is known only the female incubates the clutch, for a period of between sixteen and twenty-one days. Both sexes feed the young. The nestling stage is known to be long, eighteen to twenty-one days.
Younger segments are dullish green, long and wide, with small notches on the margins. Structures characteristic of cacti, called areoles, form in these notches. Flowers form from areoles at the ends of the stems. These are scarlet in colour, long, radially symmetrical (actinomorphic), opening to a funnel shape with a maximum diameter of about .
Starting as a blue dullish green the leaves mature to a glossy green. Adult leaves are a similar green on both sides, lance-shaped and long and wide on a flattened petiole long. The flowers are borne in groups of up to seven in leaf axils on a flattened peduncle long. The unopened buds are club-shaped, long and wide including the pedicel.
Coris cuvieri grows to a maximum length of which is slightly longer than the related Coris gaimard. It has a dullish orange-brownish background colour with green markings which become more obvious as the fish matures. Adult males have yellow and blue markings on their heads face and also have a greenish-white vertical stripe in the middle of the body, the stripe being absent in the females. There is a green spot on each body scale which contrasts with the dark reddish body.
The floral cup has a tuft of hairs around its base, dull purple or cream-coloured flowers with divided sepals and petals with a transparent margin. When Alex George reviewed the genus in 1991 he formally described this section, publishing the description in the journal Nuytsia. The name Infuscata is derived from the Latin word fusca meaning "dark" or "dusky" referring to the dullish colour of plants in this section. The type species for this section is Verticordia oxylepis and the other species is V. longistylis.
Broad white tips located on the greater and lesser primary coverts and dullish-brown with rufous brown edges on the primary and secondary coverts gives the closed wings a rufous appearance. The chin, throat, chest, and belly can appear to be white or a pale-buffy white, although the chest and belly contain keenly blackish oval shapes. The underwing is buffy-white. The iris is typically either orange or orange-yellow, with a dull brown bill with its base of the lower mandible appear to be pinkish grey.
Camponotus floridanus is one of the most familiar ant species in Florida owing both to its large size and conspicuous coloration. Workers and queens are bicolored, having a reddish-orange head and a bright to dullish orange colored mesosoma and legs, punctuated sharply by a deep black gaster. Male alates of this species are more concolorous, primarily ranging in the rusty to cider oranges. C. floridanus can be distinguished from its visually similar but smaller relative Camponotus tortuganus by its wider than long head, smaller but stockier legs relative to body size and overall stouter build.
The southern scrub robin (Drymodes brunneopygia) is a species of bird in the family Petroicidae. It is endemic to Australia, where it occurs in mallee and heathland in the semi-arid southern parts of the continent, extending from Wyperfeld National Park in Victoria in the east through South Australia to the west coast between Kalbarri and the Pinnacles in Nambung National Park. It is a relatively dull and large robin, adults being around in length, of which around a third is the tail feathers. Most of the plumage is grey, except for a dullish red tail and patterned black-and-white wings.
Paul Cornell, Martin Day, and Keith Topping wrote of the serial in The Discontinuity Guide (1995), "The direction is a bit lazy, and the design could be better ... The plot settles down to be dullish, but much more worthy than its reputation would suggest. The CSO's not that bad, either." In The Television Companion (1998), David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker noted the bad reputation the serial had, but felt that it was better than that and a good example of the era. He praised the extra level the story takes by offering comparisons to Greek mythology, as well as the model work and CSO.

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