murky

ബ്രാമണ്യം
definition
adjective
the sky was murky and a thin drizzle was falling
dark and gloomy, especially due to thick mist.
example
The sharks were circling me slowly in the dark, 'murky' water.
Stretching along the front of the stall was a tank of 'murky' water in which a tangle of long, dark eels writhed.
This latter sighting's a timely reminder that while the canal's 'murky' water may look inviting in the heat of the day, swimming's not an option for cooling off.
Last year it was dull and 'murky' all morning the day of the party, but it brightened up after lunch.
When the dead leaves rustle, the wind rattles the skeletons of trees, and ragged clouds scud across a 'murky' moon, there's an ominous frisson in the air.
Growing up in Cold War Australia in the 1960s, I was vaguely aware of this 'murky' family past, though it was rarely talked about.
We drank some more and watched the sky turn from 'murky' brown to misty grey to a pale blue.
The president hopes so, but the limited number of rulings and writings leaves that question 'murky' .
I squinted through the thick, 'murky' black of the night, my eyes following the progress of the light.
You breathe in and your lungs fill with a 'murky' mist that threatens to choke the life right out of you.
A piece of York's 'murky' past emerged from the depths, when workers on the Ouse came across an old barrow in the river.
The gravestones were barely seen through a thick layer of 'murky' fog that encompassed everything it could get its claws around.
Peering down into the 'murky' water, I sensed that something terrifying lay beneath the surface.
Noir is supposed to be morally 'murky' , but few films approach the level of depravity present here.
These and other questions quiver in an atmosphere ever more 'murky' with suspicion, doubt and fear.
At the pier, he described a stringy plant floating in the 'murky' water as a weedy species that had escaped from aquariums.
By this time the sky had turned a 'murky' grey and the sea was being whipped up by the wind… and then we were met by the pier master with the bad news that the ferry was cancelled.
As part of a training exercise they waded into the lake looking for remnants of a bridge that has been hidden beneath the 'murky' waters since it collapsed in the 1960s.
The film's attitude to these questions is 'murky' at best.
This language of the plain and the crystal clear conceals the fact that we navigate in 'murky' waters.
In the 'murky' world of seventeenth-century espionage and plotting, casual brutality was all too common fare.
It wasn't dark, just the 'murky' light you get from storm clouds.
In the 'murky' world of international espionage, rumours abound about the credibility of his information.
The water was so 'murky' I could not see anything but dark shapes.
The St. Mary's River is a wide channel of dark 'murky' water.
Then, as the 'murky' water recedes, it leaves behind slush and debris that could take weeks to be cleared.
The air was thick and 'murky' , and she began to imagine horrible things coming for her.
Authorities say no one saw him because the water was so 'murky' .
The event highlights the 'murky' grey area that exists for Hong Kong residents who get caught up in legal troubles on the mainland.
If the past was 'murky' , the future looks even more so.
Credits: Google Translate