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Discover LudwigThe word "pigsty" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a messy and dirty place, particularly one where animals live. For example, "The kitchen was a real pigsty after the party."
Exact(60)
He steals food from a neighbourhood grocery store, his bank refuses to lend him any money, and he is in debt both to a menacing bookmaker (Terrence Howard) and a pregnant Russian prostitute (Naomi Watts) who visits him in his pigsty of a house.
Not for nothing is there a Chinese character, qing, that designates both "pigsty" and "outhouse", and the idea of consuming a beast fed on communal waste has appalled societies from the ancient Egyptians to the Jews and 19th-century New Yorkers.
In a recent ad Ms Ernst stands in a pigsty and says: "It's a mess: dirty, noisy and it stinks...I'm talking about...Washington".That Americans will cast many protest votes seems certain, but what will they be voting for?
Pasolini's use of eroticism, violence, and depravity as vehicles for his political and religious speculations in such films as Teorema (1968; "Theorem") and Porcile (1969; "Pigsty") brought him into conflict with conservative elements of the Roman Catholic Church.
On £100 you couldn't make a pigsty liveable, entertain new friends, and live".
Untidiness Dr Rachel Andrew, a chartered clinical psychologist and teenager expert, believes that the preconception that all teenagers are filthy little toerags living in bedrooms that smell worse that a pigsty is a false one.
Instead, the house is a pigsty because Joe likes it that way: he sees it as an all-male, laissez-faire "hog heaven" where you wear your clothes straight from the washing line and where the bathtub doubles as a diving pool.
Here it's the heroine who's the ambitionless slob, a grad-school dropout treading water as a waitress and living in a pigsty of an apartment.
Once Felix takes up residence in Oscar's West Side pigsty and starts trying to transform it into House Beautiful, their differences quickly lead to a war, which is summed up in Act III: OSCAR: I'll tell you exactly what it is.
Her husband hopelessly asks her, "Why don't you come to bed?" You'd have to have a heart of Teflon not to laugh when she spits at him, "Because we live in a pigsty!" This is TV at its TV-est.
Hardy rounds off his portrait of Forrest with an extraordinary bass grunt, meant to indicate satisfaction, scorn, and pretty much everything in between; he sounds like Lee Marvin waking up in a pigsty.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com