What's the difference between disrepair and ramshackle?

Disrepair


Definition:

  • (n.) A state of being in bad condition, and wanting repair.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When my pictures were published, some Star Wars fans were annoyed that the house in this picture had been left in such a state of disrepair.
  • (2) For many decades, we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry; subsidized the armies of other countries while allowing for the very sad depletion of our military; we’ve defended other nations’ borders while refusing to defend our own; and spent trillions and trillions of dollars overseas while America’s infrastructure has fallen into disrepair and decay.
  • (3) In 2012, the roof of Glen Licht House bothy sustained serious damage and if not repaired quickly, the interior will be fall into disrepair.
  • (4) Those properties being targeted have fallen into major disrepair and, in many cases, have been occupied by squatters and attracted antisocial behaviour such as loud parties and drug abuse.
  • (5) But the johads fell into disrepair a century ago during the consolidation of British rule and land management in India.
  • (6) Australia has committed $420m in additional aid to PNG, most to be spent on projects elsewhere in the country, including $207m on the Lae Angau hospital, the nation’s second biggest and in disrepair for decades.
  • (7) These blocks were built in the 90s and 00s after the one-storey housing in the hutongs was torn down for being too “old”, ironic given that many of their rapidly erected replacements have already fallen into disrepair.
  • (8) Other buildings where people used to work, pray or live now sit empty and in disrepair.
  • (9) Toddington Manor has been deserted for 20 years and allowed to fall into disrepair.
  • (10) Jack went to the Widnes town clerk to obtain a form allowing tenants to claim rebates when landlords let their property fall into disrepair, knocking 40% off their rent.
  • (11) As a result, at least a third of the structures fell into disrepair.
  • (12) Hampson describes Kenyatta national hospital's brachytherapy unit as having been "in a state of disrepair for several years".
  • (13) I know what happens with free samples: you drop out, your tree house falls into gloomy disrepair like the Fall of the Secret Hideout of Usher, you wear army surplus jackets for some reason, and the girl you like begins holding hands with someone who has an Osmonds haircut.
  • (14) Over the last seven years the Tories have starved the public services we rely on of resources, running them down and pushing them into disrepair,” Corbyn is expected to say.
  • (15) If the estate had not been left to fall into disrepair, he argues, there would be no need to demolish it.
  • (16) Dismayed to find his heroes sidelined by Pixar and their brand in a state of disrepair, he also resolved to do everything he could to get the old gang back together.
  • (17) • 726 North Indian Canyon Drive (+1 760 320 1640, moviecolonyhotel.com ); double rooms from $99 The Willows The Willows, Palm Springs Built in 1924 by attorney Samuel Untermyer , who hosted friend and fellow Palm Springs-lover Albert Einstein, the Willows was rescued from near-complete disrepair in the mid-90s by a couple of emergency room doctors from Los Angeles: husband and wife Paul Marut and Tracy Conrad.
  • (18) Under Brandis’s aegis the FOI system, which is supposed to foster open democracy, has tumbled into disrepair.
  • (19) Mercedes Guimarães, 60, who has lived in the district of Gamboa on-and-off since the mid-1960s, says that a combination of official neglect and laws designed to preserve the facades of historic buildings had resulted in decades of disrepair.
  • (20) The plumbing vehicle is outside the Nepalese embassy, which property websites suggest the Nepalese government would like to sell, and which has fallen into a state of disrepair, particularly noticeable next to its expensively maintained neighbours.

Ramshackle


Definition:

  • (a.) Loose; disjointed; falling to pieces; out of repair.
  • (v. t.) To search or ransack; to rummage.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) As we settle down to chat in the deputy prime minister's ramshackle constituency base at 85 Netherfield Road, Sheffield, it is hard to dispel the impression that he's still a man under siege.
  • (2) No one else need bother to paint them as a ramshackle and rancorous rabble marooned in the past and without a plausible account of the future.
  • (3) In between, the small downtown area is a shell of empty, crumbling shop fronts and derelict, boarded-up houses interspersed with the odd bar, ramshackle residential street and tracts of wasteland.
  • (4) It takes time for Dhaka's ramshackle emergency services to arrive, so hundreds of locals clamber over and through the rubble, tearing at the concrete blocks and mangled metal with their hands.
  • (5) In the vast dusty fields and ramshackle towns of Shinyanga the problem is that sex education is minimal.
  • (6) Then he showed me another yellow building; this one was more like a ramshackle shed, with wooden props that looked like they were stopping it collapsing into the mud.
  • (7) The conference communique, drafts of which have been widely leaked , recognises, in effect, that the ramshackle, temporary governance arrangements in place since 2004 have not worked and are no longer sustainable.
  • (8) Over the last 30 years, a dense canopy of trees has grown to shade its ramshackle cluster of caravans, old buses, huts and makeshift toilets, many decorated with peace slogans and abstract murals.
  • (9) A few years later, Davies had his own ramshackle premises; in 2011, Tangled Parrot was named Wales's best independent record shop, just as he was expanding the business to include the Parrot Music Bar and Café .
  • (10) Fires regularly swept through the ramshackle huts, which remained until the local government built high-rise flats in 1970.
  • (11) Arcade Fire's sound is all their own, and it has become – even with its moments of ramshackle amateurishness, and its merging of the raw and the refined – one of the key rock signatures of recent times.
  • (12) We fled the capital almost a decade ago, swapping a rented flat in Kennington, south London, for a mortgage on a ramshackle old house in the Oxford suburbs.
  • (13) And Adriana spoke on her own behalf: “One of the most important changes in my path being involved in the Alex Nieto case has been to learn more about restorative practices, because as someone trained in legal systems, I know that the pain and fear that we are not safe from police in our communities will not go away until there is personal accountability by those who harm us.” Fear that we aren't safe from police in our communities won't go away until there's accountability by those who harm us Adriana Camarena Adriana, her historian husband, and their friends – including an Aids activist and a choreographer – who live nearby in a ramshackle old building, had faced their own eviction battle last year, and won it.
  • (14) There were two: a ramshackle center housing a combined pharmacy, city hall and police station, and a Payday Loans outlet decorated with neon lights, promising $10,000 on the spot.
  • (15) That conflict has deeply divided Lebanon along sectarian lines, and paralysed the country's ramshackle political system to the point that it has been stuck with a weak and ineffectual caretaker government since April.
  • (16) The city’s walls have become complex documents, authored and re-authored like ramshackle Wikipedia pages.
  • (17) Layali was born on 7 October 1998 on the open deck of a ramshackle fishing boat crammed with 74 migrants.
  • (18) Voted for by approximately 90 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the Golden Globes have faced criticism for what is perceived as their ramshackle structure and lowbrow sensibility.
  • (19) The family has been working on farmland to cover rent for two ramshackle tents on the edge of a field since February 2012.
  • (20) Casas da Comporta, Alentejo Don't be fooled by the sleepy, slightly ramshackle air: Comporta is where Lisbon's fashion and media set come to get some sand between their perfectly manicured toes.