in several ways:
1. if you leave something like in the middle of the doorway and both you and someone else comes in they could trip over.
2. a child could run into something and seriously hurt themselves (thats if children about)
3. if its also unclean you could end up catching something
4. also thinking about it psychologically it can also make you not look forward to going to work and can cause you to become depressed.
This house is untidy. This room is untidy. Everything is untidy. She was an untidy person. He never cleaned and was an untidy person.
Her room is untidy. The house was a mess, which means it was untidy.
Untidy is an adjective, so you'll use it to describe a noun. For example: "Your room is so untidy! Clean it up now!" The park was very untidy, trash was everywhere.
The word "untidy" is an adjective.
The root word of untidy is "tidy."
Untidy is an adjective. You use it in a sentence to describe a noun. For example: My mother told me to clean my untidy room. Muggles thought it was easy to find things in her untidy piles.
Keep Britain Untidy was created in 2000.
The Untidy Suicides of Your Degenerate Children was created in 1992.
Yes, the term 'untidy clothes' is a correct use of the adjective.
how can a stigima affect your health risk?
Unkept - not retained, not preserved, not maintained Unkempt - neglected, untidy because of neglect, disheveled (like the unkempt clothes of a tramp) Essentially, the word, unkept, is not commonly used in English.
It's THE 4th workstation. obviously there's a group of workstation computers, and it is the 4th workstation in that group. Not much else to it...