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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tiny dilapidated" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is both small in size and in a state of disrepair or ruin.
Example: "They lived in a tiny dilapidated house at the end of the street, which had seen better days."
Alternatives: "a small rundown" or "a little decrepit".
Exact(1)
Hoping to lure Chinese investors and some of the ever-growing number of Chinese tourists, the local government in Inchon, just west of Seoul, four years ago transformed a tiny dilapidated Chinese neighborhood into the country's first Chinatown.
Similar(59)
Nineteen tiny, dilapidated rooms above a McDonald's in Islington, north London, are earning a multi-millionaire landlord and a sub-letting company an estimated £400,000 a year in rent, a Guardian investigation has revealed.
The university's budget woes are painfully clear in the tiny, dilapidated office of Richard Burt, a professor of English who is moving to a new job at the University of Florida.
A tiny, slightly dilapidated neighborhood grocery for decades, the market was sold in 2001 to Suni Ellis who turned it into more of an upscale mini-delicatessen.
A tiny and now dilapidated bar at Parramatta Stadium was also named in honour of Marston, but it pales in comparison to the grander edifices at the stadium named after local rugby league identities whose impact on their particular sport is not nearly as great.
His factories and work sites are studies in geometry and gesture; he breathes life into the tiniest dilapidated building with nothing more than paint, board, and an X-Acto knife.
He yearns to return to his home in a tiny hamlet in New Hampshire, a dilapidated wooden farmhouse where he lives alone.
He was educated and well dressed, yet still lived in his dilapidated childhood farmhouse in a tiny village on Moldova's border with Ukraine.
Their home is a dilapidated mud hut on a tiny piece of land near the village.
Here, for $3,200 a year, about 150 French and foreign students study and live in a damp, dilapidated former corporate summer resort with a tiny library, few computers, no television and no cellphone reception.
Former charity worker Hannah, unable to conceive and desperate for a child, has persuaded husband Will to relocate to a tiny hamlet in Suffolk, upsizing to a large but dilapidated house and embarking on an insanely ambitious decorating programme in order to impress the woman from the adoption agency.
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