Definitions of Daggled:
part of speech: past participle
Trailed
in
mud
or
foul
water;
befouled.
Usage examples for Daggled:
-
The
hat
was
the
worst
part
of
the
affair;
the
colour
of
the
blue
edge
of
the
ribbon
had
run
into
the
white,
and
the
pretty
soft
feather
had
been
so
daggled
in
the
wet,
that
an
old
hen
on
a
wet
day
was
respectability
itself
compared
with
it,
and
there
was
nothing
for
it
but
to
take
it
out;
and
even
then
the
hat
reminded
Kate
of
a
certain
Amelia
Matilda
Bunny,
whose
dirty
finery
was
a
torment
and
a
by-
word
in
St.
James's
Parsonage.
"Countess Kate", Charlotte M. Yonge
-
Then
he
knelt
by
a
bush
of
gorse,
told
his
beads,
and
earnestly
entreated
direction
and
aid
for
himself,
and
protection
for
his
sister;
and
when
the
sun
grew
so
low
as
to
make
it
time
for
a
wanderer
to
seek
harbour,
he
stained
and
daggled
his
gown
in
the
mire
and
water
of
a
peat-
moss,
so
as
to
destroy
its
Oxford
gloss,
took
a
book
in
his
hand,
and
walked
towards
the
monastery,
reciting
Latin
verses
in
the
sing-
song
tone
then
universally
followed.
"The Caged Lion", Charlotte M. Yonge