Bleached in a sentence as an adjective

It looks like someone bleached an orange fox's tail and rapped it around an old beach ball.

However, 40 years of intense UV radiation have bleached them all white.

Somehow I feel that bleached out featureless flags on the Moon matches the message in that plaque perfectly.

Maybe the word invokes a vision of sentences stolid and dry, bleached with metaphor to a colorless drab?

The flag is bleached and the other things are dusty, courtesy of your friendly neighborhood solar radiation.

>In this economy, ads saying "we're looking for someone to suck dry till we leave their bleached bones on the beach somewhere" can pull people in because ... desperation.

Small time counterfeiting is generally bleached out $1 bills printed over with $5 images to retain the same cotton-paper ratio used so that it feels the same.

I think of the headers which identify an oncoming comments section as the online equivalent of a bleached skeleton - a final warning to turn back.

That's funny how wires + blinking led => detonator, something you knead in your hand => C4, cute youg girl with bleached hair => ******* bomberOsama achieved million times more than what he would have dreamed of.

As the everglades experiences rapid salt water intrusion, the reefs continue to be bleached due acidification, and mangroves migrate inland slower than sea level, the productive estuaries might become less productive for popular sport fish and commercial species.

Bleached definitions

adjective

having lost freshness or brilliance of color; "sun-bleached deck chairs"; "faded jeans"; "a very pale washed-out blue"; "washy colors"

See also: faded washed-out washy

adjective

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

See also: colored coloured dyed