11 adverbs to describe how to emaciated

His limbs were nearly frozen, and his body dreadfully emaciated.

Perhaps I ought to put all this in the past tense, for now he scarcely ever speakshe reads next to nothingit is difficult to persuade him to eathe will not leave the househe used to have a rather ruddy complexionhe is now deadly pale and terribly emaciated.

Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair comes off in large masses.

The child was pitifully emaciated, with drawn features and large, dark eyes that gazed about her bewilderedly.

I was fearfully emaciated, and my death was daily expected.

When the Boy joined him, there he was sitting up in Nicholas's sled, appallingly emaciated, but brisk as you please, ordering the disposition of the axe and rifle along either side, the tea-kettle and grub between his feet, showing how the deer-skin blankets should be wrapped, and especially was he dictatorial about the lashing of the mahout.

This enigmatic, sexless figure was green; through her violet eyelids the eyes were terrible in their cold blue; pimples surrounded her mouth; horribly emaciated, skeleton arms bared to the elbows issued from ragged tattered sleeves and trembled feverishly; and the skinny legs shivered in shoes that were several sizes too large.

When dug out he seemed very little the worse for his escapade, though decidedly emaciated in appearance.

His figure, too, though tall and well proportioned, had seemed frail to her when she had seen him standing by the piano, and his hands were positively emaciated.

His stature was much above the middle height, though his figure, which was remarkably slender, was bowed; not by years certainly, for his countenance, though singularly emaciated, still retained traces of youth.

She was tall and deplorably emaciated, her whole skeleton, except the thigh-bones, being quite visible.

11 adverbs to describe how to  emaciated  - Adverbs for  emaciated