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- Dictionarysordid/ˈsɔːdɪd/
adjective
- 1. involving immoral or dishonourable actions and motives; arousing moral distaste and contempt: "the story paints a sordid picture of bribes and scams" Similar Opposite
- 2. dirty or squalid: "the overcrowded housing conditions were sordid and degrading" Similar Opposite
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adjective. uk / ˈsɔː.dɪd / us / ˈsɔːr.dɪd / sordid adjective (DIRTY) Add to word list. dirty and unpleasant: There are lots of really sordid apartments in the city's poorer areas. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Dirty & untidy. all over the place idiom. Augean. besmeared. bespattered. bloodied. lie.
The meaning of SORDID is marked by baseness or grossness : vile. How to use sordid in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Sordid.
Sordid definition: morally ignoble or base; vile. See examples of SORDID used in a sentence.
Something that is filthy or run down such as a neighborhood or someone's living conditions can be called sordid, but it is usually used figuratively to mean immoral or dishonest. If you want to hear the sordid details of someone's actions, it's because they were extremely dishonest or immoral and also because they were supposed to be kept a secret.
If you describe someone's behaviour as sordid, you mean that it is immoral or dishonest.
adjective. us / ˈsɔːr.dɪd / uk / ˈsɔː.dɪd / sordid adjective (DIRTY) Add to word list. dirty and unpleasant: There are lots of really sordid apartments in the city's poorer areas. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Dirty & untidy. all over the place idiom. Augean. besmeared. bespattered. bloodied. lie.
adj. 1. morally ignoble or base; vile. 2. meanly selfish or mercenary. 3. filthy; squalid. [1590–1600; < Latin sordidus = sord (ēs) dirt + -idus -id 4] sor′did•ly, adv. sor′did•ness, n.