Dust-covered in a sentence as an adjective

Nintendo got that right with their, now dust-covered, Wiis.

It's mostly for show, like the proverbial dust-covered xbox.

Describing "a dust-covered sunflower" as a "yellow flower" doesn't much help the blind person and certainly doesn't help the sighted.

"Khaak" is Persian for soil, "Khaki" can mean either dust-covered or color of soil, so typically a light shade of brown in more arid regions.

These are exactly the people that will not know about switching the filter off. Their children will get around the filters, but these dust-covered voters will believe that the internet is a little bit more cleaned up, and a lot less useful, than it really is.

In that remote, dust-covered town in Maharashtra, Motewar and his colleagues had become among the most proficient ulcer surgeons in the world.

Why should we be able to transform a barren, icy, radioactive, razor-sharp-dust-covered, dead rock into a suitable place for us to live?I feel like my thinking on this subject paralleled the work of Kim Stanley Robinson.

Dust-covered definitions

adjective

covered with a layer of dust; "a dusty pile of books"

See also: dusty