It's an adjective.
Mess is a verb
The verb of messy is mess. As in "to be a mess" or "to make a mess".
that the person you are discribing is messy.
The Yiddish word for messy is "פֿאָרשטערבט" (forshṭerbt).
A context clue is information that offers direct or indirect suggestions about its meaning.The clue for the word 'sloppily' is the base word 'slop', which is a noun and a verb. The noun 'slop' is a word for some type of waste of a liquid nature. The verb 'slop' is to handle something liquid in a careless or messy way.The adjective form of the verb to slop is 'sloppy'.The adverb form of the adjective sloppy is 'sloppily'.The 'ily' ending of the word is a clue that the word is an adverb, a standard suffix for adverbs.The context that can be inferred from the clues is that the adverb is modifying another word in the sentence as done in a careless or messy way.
The Hawaiian translation for "messy" is "lapaʻau".
The verb of messy is mess. As in "to be a mess" or "to make a mess".
messy, messy, messy
Messy
mesyy like an Ausie in a bar at 3 am:p
A messy hair gel.
You're a messy pig.
It's not really messy after you clean it out. But in middle of the week, it'll get messy and you have to clean it again.
Draw can be a verb (transitive or intransitive) or a noun. Here are some examples:Transitive verb: Larry will draw three names from the hat for door prizes.Intransitive verb: Chrissy found painting rather messy, and she much preferred to draw.Noun: The dinosaur skeletons are a big draw at the Museum of Natural Sciences.
=messy,slob,clumsy.dirty,out of order.=
Well, an antonym of neat is messy.
that the person you are discribing is messy.
Well, ultimately, it comes down to this: Neat + one out of place item = messy. Messy + one out of place item = still messy. "Messy" is a lot easier status to maintain than "neat."