16 adjectives to describe wreckage

Haughtily she moved round the counter and with scornful finger-tips took up the tiny wreckage of a great hope.

I got down into the boat, and when she followed, I rowed her back all the way past Foundoucli and the Tophana quay to where one turns into the Golden Horn by St. Sophia, around the mouth of the Horn being a vast semicircle of charred wreckage, carried out by the river-currents.

And out of the numb exuberant wreckage of your days come these raku pots graceful open shapes, lines freely scratched into the clay, deep turquoise, copper glazes, extravagant, surprised, too beautiful for tears.

There in the basement, amid the familiar wreckage as of a thousand umbrellas, sat little Annie.

Flanking the church there had been a communal hall, which was now shapeless, irredeemable wreckage.

The Wellman of this enterprise escaped with his life an' a little wreckage.

So in drawers and chests and boxes she had packed her pathetic lootodds and ends of embroidery, of dress goods, of passementerie, of chair coverings; dozens of spools of thread and crochet cotton; odd dishes; jars of cold cream; flotsam and jetsam of the shops, a mere wreckage of material.

Examination of a number of the German merchant vessels interned in United States ports showed that most of them had been seriously damaged by their crews to render them unseaworthy, and it was rumored that the partial wreckage of these ships had been ordered February 1 by the German government.

And in them, as we knew, there was the most pitiful wreckage of allthe human wreckage of the war.

We enter a new worldthe under-world of water, and things that glide and swim; of sea-grasses and currents; of flowing waves that lap about the body with a cool chill; of palpitating color, that, at great depths, becomes a sort of darkness; of sea-beds of shell and sand, and bits of scattered wreckage; of ooze and tangled sea-plants, dusky shapes, and fan-like fins.

Flanking the church there had been a communal hall, which was now shapeless, irredeemable wreckage.

Roy made a clever landing on the island and then lost no time in wading out to the half floating, half submerged wreckage.

To make the matter still worse the collision had taken place in a deep and narrow cut, and had filled it from side to side with twisted and splintered wreckage.

Just opposite this transept, amid universal wreckage, a cafe is miraculously preserved.

Finally it will furnish honest and honorable employment right away for hundreds of thousands all over the land, and create an entirely novel industry out of what is at present an absolute wreckage.

The thing peers upward, maimed and blinded, from out of the utter wreckage of the Archbishop's palace on the one side and dust-heaps of crumbled houses on the other.

16 adjectives to describe  wreckage