From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdustydust‧y /ˈdʌsti/●くろまる●くろまる○しろまる adjective1DIRTYcovered with dustAdrian cycled along the dusty road.Everything’s really dusty.► see thesaurus at dirty2 →dusty blue/pink etcExamples from the Corpusdusty• The road to Bangalore was hot and dusty.• The room was dark and dusty.• The shelves are really dusty.• They lived in a dustyadobe house along Buckeye Road.• The journal was dusty and beginning to fall apart.• He merely watched the obscurecorners of the busyplanet and poked his stubbynose into dustycrannies.• As they hurried down dusty, echoingstaircases, Mungo began to wonder whether he would have enough money.• The outer door opened, and the dustymoonscapelay before them, glimmering in the earthlight.• The walls in the house were dustypastels.• The rising sun slowly turns the drabgreys and dullbrowns of the mountains to patches of palegold and dustypinks.• The dustyreflectionreminded him of a painting, the dim figure still as paint.• a dusty road• Games players cleared areas of sand or dustyrubble.• dusty shelves• Samandari lives in a small dustyvillage on the edge of the desert.