Desiccated in a sentence as an adjective

As long as where they live isn't flooded by rising sea levels, or their farms aren't desiccated by drought....

Usually desiccated starch from potatoes & the like.

The conditions are quite simple, something like a small pond that can be desiccated and collect some water again later.

They probably did a huge dividend recap, then let the desiccated remains amble away to oblivion with a shrug.

If you have say, more forests and toxic **** holes of cities, is that a counter-argument?And the cropland, if its desiccated and over fertilized?

But apparently viruses tend to get destroyed by sunlight or desiccated fairly easily.

The advantage of going for mammoths is the large amount of tissue available to work with that hasn't been desiccated or damaged by chemical preservatives.

The legends say that some used it for something useful back when it was nascent, but all that's left is a desiccated husk, beaten daily by hecklers on forums across the Internet.

Geographically, it's dominated by a desiccated plateau: every watercourse carves a gorge, with the depth of gorge largely determined by how big the watercourse is.

This began a period of lucrative trade between Egypt and Europe, and suppliers substituted rare mummia exudate with entire mummies, either embalmed or desiccated.

The last refuge is, of course, giving your opinion to a pollster, who will get a version of it through a desiccated question, and then will submerge it in a Niagara of similar opinions, and convert them into—what else?—another piece of news.

Materialism, without reforming the account of matter inherited by Descartes, does away with the material mind and is now left with a desiccated account of reality that cannot even _in_principle_ account for color understood as experience.

This would be on a scale several orders of magnitude larger.- The amount of mining that would need to be done to provide the algae with what they need to grow beyond sunlight and atmospheric carbon- The problem of actually sequestering thousands of gigatons of desiccated algae.

"The field of television is littered with the desiccated husks of eager artists of all stripes - from writers to casting directors, production designers, actors, scenic painters, set builders, and the people who embroider the backs of the chairs - who, in the name of their own honor and work ethic, wore themselves out on the wheel of "I'll know it when I see it"... and the high castles surrounding those fields are occupied by fat, bloated barons who sit on their comfy thrones wondering with great self pity why they can't seem to hire a staff that just "gets it.

Desiccated definitions

adjective

thoroughly dried out; "old boxes of desiccated Cuban cigars"; "dried-out boards beginning to split"

See also: dried-out

adjective

preserved by removing natural moisture; "dried beef"; "dried fruit"; "dehydrated eggs"; "shredded and desiccated coconut meat"

See also: dried dehydrated

adjective

lacking vitality or spirit; lifeless; "a technically perfect but arid performance of the sonata"; "a desiccate romance"; "a prissy and emotionless creature...settles into a mold of desiccated snobbery"-C.J.Rolo

See also: arid desiccate