Dyed in a sentence as an adjective

They altered their names, dyed their hair, learned to dress more "white" and so on.

But I would like to ask MrQuintle, who on the face of it should be a dyed in the wool HN type, why he posted it.

Straight + dyed hair = how women subjugate ourselves.

My assumption is that Jeremy's never talked to anyone with dyed hair or piercings.

I always figured his handlers were just having it dyed less and less to enhance the "experience" image.

It also comes with some smaller pieces of wool dyed different colours, and a direct phone line to a hospital.

Many of the act's opponents were dyed-in-the-wool racists and bigots, and the rest of us can be glad that they lost.

I don't remember what she did with it, but it was undoubtedly within the realm of making food-dyed water boil over a flame.

Sure they're hipsters, but it's still a crowd I'd rather be around than the one that used to make me squirm back then; and I'm a dyed-in-the-wool programmer type who hasn't much changed.

My perspective should be somewhat contentious as a dyed-in-the-wool Haskell user.

It's interesting how these dyed-in-the-wool capitalists are getting so butthurt over getting their asses kicked by more able competitors.

They're always thinking that their "value add" is going to make them stand out when in fact it makes them like one more art student with dyed hair in the oh-so-individual clone army: interchangeably weird.

It doesn't seem to matter if they are on-the-fence-socialists, outright socialists, or dyed-in-the-wool capitalists.

Whether one is describing the experience of a memory, or reciting a coached, scripted tale ...if all the facts are correct what hope is there of disproving a dyed-in-the-wool memory?Case in point: The drunkest I ever got was during a drinking game in college.

Dyed definitions

adjective

(used of color) artificially produced; not natural; "a bleached blonde"

See also: bleached colored coloured