A squalid hut is a hut in bad condition. The hut may be dirty, messy, seedy, and repulsive. The condition of the hut may be a result of poverty or neglect.
The word "squalid" is used to describe a place that is extremely dirty and disgusting. An example of a sentence that uses the word would be: Being in that squalid apartment made her skin crawl.
A small, squalid, unpleasant, or simply constructed dwelling.
A badly built hut could be called a hovel.
Yes, the noun 'hut' is a common noun, a word for a small, crude or temporary shelter of any kind anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Piet Hut, Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJHut Hill Road, Bridgewater, CT or Hut Street, Whittlesea, VIC AustraliaPizza Hut, Inc., Plano, TX"The Nut Hut", a novel by Kathleen Taylor
Yes, the word 'hut' is a noun; a word for a primitive type of dwelling; a word for a thing.
The word "squalid" is used to describe a place that is extremely dirty and disgusting. An example of a sentence that uses the word would be: Being in that squalid apartment made her skin crawl.
No, squalid is an adjective. The noun form is squalor.
The room they were living in was squalid.
The abstract noun of squalid is squalor.
The adjective form of "squalor" is "squalid."
The abandoned building was in a squalid condition, with trash and debris strewn everywhere.
The poor young man looked squalid after suffering a tough beating.
poor
dirty is the most common antonym, squalid is correct, but it is a more extreme description.
solid stolid
The squalid conditions of the tenement caught the attention of the Department of Health officials.
The synonym for the word "sordid" is "squalid" or "shameful."