How to Use scabrous in a Sentence

scabrous

adjective
  • Deadened nerves and trauma have rendered the skin scabrous and shiny as can be seen on the patient’s forearms.
    Rebecca Kreston, Discover Magazine, 9 Dec. 2011
  • On the scabrous asphalt around our Michigan home base, the T-5R would likely have all the ride comfort of a steel canoe running shallow rapids.
    Arthur St. Antoine, Car and Driver, 18 May 2020
  • For his second solo outing, the Lower East Side’s most scabrous bard decamped to a London studio.
    Spin Staff, SPIN, 22 Apr. 2022
  • The Previa tracks determinedly down the road, its path unaltered by scabrous pavement or truck ruts.
    John Phillips, Car and Driver, 28 Nov. 2022
  • Along the way, no small pleasure is to be had from the amusing, sometimes scabrous, satirical portraiture of illustrious figures.
    Nicholas Dames, New York Times, 16 Aug. 2017
  • Surfaces as varied as yoga mats and iPhone touch screens are carefully calibrated for our touch, designed to be neither too slick nor too scabrous.
    Adrienne Bernhard, Popular Mechanics, 7 Apr. 2020
  • Surfaces as varied as yoga mats and iPhone touch screens are carefully calibrated for our touch, designed to be neither too slick nor too scabrous.
    Adrienne Bernhard, Popular Mechanics, 20 Mar. 2023
  • Then again, Becker’s lyrics were as scabrous and sarcastic as Warren Zevon’s, which is the right kind of tonic for a band who painstakingly assembled the drum track for Gaucho’s title tune out of 46 separate takes.
    Dan Weiss, Billboard, 3 Sep. 2017
  • Underground rappers like Denzel Curry, Ghostemane and Scarlxrd have embraced their bloodletting lyrics and scabrous noise.
    Los Angeles Times, 10 Sep. 2019
  • Pop culture commentators belatedly began to applaud Armstrong's scabrous depiction of the mega-rich and the comedic potential of the characters, including Tom and Greg.
    Clark Collis, EW.com, 9 Nov. 2021
  • During that earlier period of tech wealth accumulation known as the dotcom era, the Baffler was a reliable source of scabrous insight into the collective insanity of the times.
    Stephen Phillips, SFChronicle.com, 22 June 2018
  • Media coverage of the new new left has tended to view predominantly white cultural types — scabrous podcast hosts, brittle little magazines — as its vanguard.
    Frank Guan, Daily Intelligencer, 5 Nov. 2017
  • Instead of another routine foray into casual adultery as a metric of modern morality, this should have been a scabrous satire on cinema’s decline and hypocrisy’s ascendance.
    Armond White, National Review, 4 Feb. 2022
  • Sometimes scabrous and always irreverent, his cartoons swipe gleefully at disability and other sensitive topics, piercing the movie’s one-day-at-a-time orthodoxy.
    Gus Van Sant, New York Times, 11 July 2018
  • Excremental flourishes notwithstanding, that gloriously scabrous picture also kick-started the careers of its director and stars, most of whom are back to illustrate the consequences of a misspent youth.
    Jeannette Catsoulis, New York Times, 16 Mar. 2017
  • Everyone from presidents and county officials to celebrities and Greek gods was celebrated or excoriated with scabrous glee.
    Donald Frazier, Washington Post, 26 Aug. 2017

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'scabrous.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Last Updated: