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All flawed synonyms

flawed
F f

adj flawed

  • incomplete — not complete; lacking some part.
  • lacking — being without; not having; wanting; less: Lacking equipment, the laboratory couldn't undertake the research project.
  • poor — having little or no money, goods, or other means of support: a poor family living on welfare.
  • unfinished — not finished; incomplete or unaccomplished.
  • wanting — lacking or absent: a motor with some of the parts wanting.
  • on the bum — a person who avoids work and sponges on others; loafer; idler.
  • seconds — next after the first; being the ordinal number for two.
  • subnormal — below the normal; less than or inferior to the normal: a subnormal amount of rain.
  • infrequent — happening or occurring at long intervals or rarely: infrequent visits.
  • meager — deficient in quantity or quality; lacking fullness or richness; scanty; inadequate: a meager salary; meager fare; a meager harvest.
  • rare — Réseaux Associés pour la Recherche Européenne
  • scanty — scant in amount, quantity, etc.; barely sufficient.
  • second fiddle — a secondary role: to play second fiddle to another person.
  • second string — Sports. the squad of players available either individually or as a team to replace or relieve those who start a game.
  • short — having little length; not long.
  • shy — bashful; retiring.
  • sketchy — like a sketch; giving only outlines or essentials. Synonyms: cursory, rough, meager, crude.
  • unequal — not equal; not of the same quantity, quality, value, rank, ability, etc.: People are unequal in their capacities.
  • scant — barely sufficient in amount or quantity; not abundant; almost inadequate: to do scant justice.
  • unassembled — noting an artificial gem formed of two or more parts, as a doublet or triplet, at least one of which is a true gemstone.
  • broken — Broken is the past participle of break.
  • debilitated — in a severely weakened state
  • decayed — having rotted as a result of bacterial, fungal, or chemical action; decomposed
  • deteriorated — Become progressively worse.
  • inhibited — overly restrained.
  • maladjusted — badly or unsatisfactorily adjusted, especially in relationship to one's social circumstances, environment, etc.
  • unfit — not fit; not adapted or suited; unsuitable: He was unfit for his office.
  • wounded — suffering injury or bodily harm, as a laceration or bullet wound: to bandage a wounded hand.
  • undermined — to injure or destroy by insidious activity or imperceptible stages, sometimes tending toward a sudden dramatic effect.
  • askew — Something that is askew is not straight or not level with what it should be level with.
  • inexact — not exact; not strictly precise or accurate.
  • off — so as to be no longer supported or attached: This button is about to come off.
  • all wet — wrong; mistaken
  • wrong number — a call made to a number other than the one intended. the number or person reached through such a call.
  • adulterated — made inferior, impure, etc. by adulterating
  • below par — If you say that someone or something is below par or under par, you are disappointed in them because they are below the standard you expected.
  • blamable — that deserves blame; culpable
  • debased — rendered less valuable or admirable
  • distorted — not truly or completely representing the facts or reality; misrepresented; false: She has a distorted view of life.
  • fallible — (of persons) liable to err, especially in being deceived or mistaken.
  • frail — having delicate health; not robust; weak: My grandfather is rather frail now.
  • lame — an ornamental fabric in which metallic threads, as of gold or silver, are woven with silk, wool, rayon, or cotton.
  • lemon — the yellowish, acid fruit of a subtropical citrus tree, Citrus limon.
  • maimed — to deprive of the use of some part of the body by wounding or the like; cripple: The explosion maimed him for life.
  • malformed — faultily or anomalously formed.
  • rank — Otto [awt-oh] /ˈɔt oʊ/ (Show IPA), 1884–1939, Austrian psychoanalyst.
  • tainted — a trace of something bad, offensive, or harmful.
  • wrong — not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
  • botched — bungled or mishandled
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