sor·did /ˈsɔrdəd/
  (a.)骯髒的,不干淨的,卑鄙的,惡劣的,可憐的,暗淡的
  Sor·did a.
  1. Filthy; foul; dirty. [Obs.]
  A sordid god; down from his hoary chin
  A length of beard descends, uncombed, unclean.   --Dryden.
  2. Vile; base; gross; mean; as, vulgar, sordid mortals. “To scorn the sordid world.”
  3. Meanly avaricious; covetous; niggardly.
  He may be old,
  And yet sordid, who refuses gold.   --Sir J. Denham.
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  sordid
       adj 1: morally degraded; "a seedy district"; "the seamy side of
              life"; "sleazy characters hanging around casinos";
              "sleazy storefronts with...dirt on the walls"- Seattle
              Weekly; "the sordid details of his orgies stank under
              his very nostrils"- James Joyce; "the squalid
              atmosphere of intrigue and betrayal" [syn: seamy, seedy,
               sleazy, squalid]
       2: unethical or dishonest; "dirty police officers"; "a sordid
          political campaign" [syn: dirty]
       3: foul and run-down and repulsive; "a flyblown bar on the edge
          of town"; "a squalid overcrowded apartment in the poorest
          part of town"; "squalid living conditions"; "sordid
          shantytowns" [syn: flyblown, squalid]
       4: meanly avaricious and mercenary; "sordid avarice"; "sordid
          material interests"