What's the difference between grimy and primy?

Grimy


Definition:

  • (superl.) Full of grime; begrimed; dirty; foul.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) And with the grimy dual carriageway of the Cromwell Road cutting across it, it's no wonder that many pedestrians preferred to take the dank Victorian tunnel that runs under Exhibition Road from the tube station to the Science Museum.
  • (2) In a grimy backroom of one neighbourhood mosque, Jan Mohammad, a blind hafez – a memoriser of the Qur’an – said he was unsure Omar had ever existed.
  • (3) His New York is a far scruffier place, with the grimy, old, Midnight Cowboy NYC rubbing against the gentrified Upper East Side, best expressed in an ordeal of a scene where Louie witnesses a virtuoso performance by a violinist while, behind the performer, an obese homeless man proceeds to disrobe and start washing himself with a bottle of filthy water.
  • (4) People around, young people in general can see what engineering is and the fact that it is no longer a mucky, oily, grimy place to work but it is a light, airy, clean environment," he said.
  • (5) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Midnight Special opens like a classic crime thriller: a missing-child alert on local TV news describes two men and a boy, who then appear before us in a grimy motel room, their behaviour contradicting the idea that the boy has been abducted.
  • (6) There's a believability to it – these characters aren't superheroes, they have this griminess to them, these nuances.
  • (7) The remake runs on rails from A to Z, and what Wiseman gains in his grimy, ill-lit visuals he loses in the acting: everyone here is a name actor who bores me (Colin Farrell, Jessica Biel, Kate Beckinsale – AKA Mrs Wiseman), or an actor I love (Bryan Cranston, Bill Nighy) being underused or miscast.
  • (8) He brought his hand to his face, covered in a paste of blood and dust beneath a shock of grimy hair, and looked at the red stain on his fingers, a look of quiet surprise on his face.
  • (9) When you are all sweaty and grimy in the heat of the city, this is the most delicious and refreshing thing ever – and super cheap.
  • (10) For the trademark exterior shots of grimy terrace homes, opening directly on to the street, the team use a small area around Theed Street in Waterloo, close to the Old and Young Vic theatres.
  • (11) At the local administration, the doors of the nearby cafe burst open and dozens of children, grimy, bloodied and some limp, were hurriedly carried out into the street by police and bystanders.
  • (12) Tinder uses the same GPS capabilities as Grindr – the wildly popular and barefacedly grimy gay hook-up app – but requires every user to have a Facebook account, which gives it a safer air.
  • (13) Along with Atos and Serco and the rest of the grimy battery of state contractors, that means a new significance for the army of voluntary organisations struggling to pick up the pieces, often with some Whitehall blessing.
  • (14) But the worst are shikumen s, no matter how historically significant or beautiful, that have become so decrepit and grimy from decades of overcrowding, heavy communal usage and minimal infrastructural investment by residents and local authorities.
  • (15) If the accusations are true, Lord Rennard's gropings will be all too familiar to women everywhere, harried by grimy colleagues fondling, pinching, leering, and pretending women can't take a joke if they complain.
  • (16) A few blocks away, beneath the 101 freeway, you could find the likes of Paul Checoine, a former bicycle messenger sunk in a grimy wheelchair, stricken with disease, drug addiction and mental illness, chattering a mile a minute to nobody in particular as traffic roared overhead.
  • (17) Today B29 is showing its age and looks more like a dirty old dock than a pool with its crumbling grey concrete, grimy brickwork and old ducts and sections of corroding pipes.
  • (18) Gupta, who says he has conducted more than 50,000 such operations, told Reuters news agency that health workers gave the women Indian-manufactured brands of ciprofloxacin , a commonly prescribed antibiotic, and ibuprofen, a pain killer, after the operations, which were conducted in a grimy room of an unused private hospital in a village.
  • (19) Against the cell’s peeling walls and grimy sink and toilet, Ai’s stool and Fela’s saxophone hold out the promise of bold but joyous antagonism.
  • (20) "We're dealing with a hundred years of suppression," said Berrington, streaked and grimy from round-the-clock battle.

Primy


Definition:

  • (a.) Being in its prime.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A diagram with the exact percentages and likelihood of changes of the fetus presentation for primi- and multiparae between 32nd and 40th week of gestation is given.
  • (2) Among the patients with eclampsia, 64.9% were primis, 29.7% were gravida II-IV and 5.4% were grand multis.
  • (3) In this study, the incidence of abnormal cervical cytology amongst 500 pregnant south Indian women (gravida 3, para 2 or more) who were booked under the Post Partum Programme of the Government of India was compared to that of 200 primi and second gravidas from the same out patient clinic population.
  • (4) Terti-parity or more was not a risk factor per se; the difference in the frequency of unfavorable outcome between secundiparas and terti-paras or more disappeared after those with unsuccessful histories were excluded, while the difference still remained significant between primi- and secundiparas.
  • (5) In stage IV, the center of foot pressure began at the head of the ossis metatarsalis primi and moved back and toward the lateral side.
  • (6) With increasing parity the percentage of OKT3+, OKT4+ and OKT8+ cells decreased slowly for both sexes and the difference was significant between primi- and multiparae.
  • (7) Younger women, mostly primi-gravidae were more frequently found to have benefited from peri-natal health care services than older multi-gravidae.
  • (8) Blood samples from 67 healthy primi and multiparae, 6 to 40 weeks pregnant, and from a group of 8 women in labour and after delivery of the placenta were examined.
  • (9) Age, primi and grande multiparity, unplanned pregnancy, and related illegal abortion are the reproductive causes.
  • (10) During 1968-1973 510 Rh-negative, non-Rh-immunized primi- and multigravidae giving birth to Rh-positive infants, regardless of the ABO constellation, received 250 mug immunoglobulin anti-D post partum.
  • (11) This study is a retrospective analysis of induction of labour by means of PGE2 tablets, one group being electively, the other group medically indicated; in all, 2149 primi- and multiparae during a period of 5 years.
  • (12) Analyses of demographic and psychological data available for the sample indicated that this relation is dependent upon maternal parity (primi- vs. multiparous mother).
  • (13) In the lower extremity supernumerary muscles included the "tenuissimus," "peroneus quinti digiti," and the "extensor primi internodii hallucis."
  • (14) Pasta, which has historically been a smaller primi (first) dish, overflows the enormous bowls in which it is served in many Italian restaurants.
  • (15) Concerning the duration of labor, the rate of cesareans, incipient chorio-amnionitis and fetal morbidity, independent of cervical maturation, results after prostaglandin E2 administration were better among the primi- and pluriparae.
  • (16) Studies were performed in 168 primi- and multigravidas with normal medical and obstetric histories (mean age of 23,5 years).
  • (17) Primi- and multiparous cows were analyzed separately.
  • (18) Our findings do not support previous studies (Primi, D., and P.-A.
  • (19) The results also indicated clear but insignificant responsive differences between primi- and multiparous women (90% vs. 76%), which were only minimally reflected in progesterone concentrations.
  • (20) In hours, the differences were 4 and 2 for primi- and multigravidas, respectively.

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