Germy Meaning in English
word
ˈdʒɝːmi
JUR-mee
dʒˈɜːmi
JUR-mee
التعريف
If something is germy, it has a lot of germs and can make you sick. It's used to describe things that are dirty or not clean.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
'Germy' is informal, often used when talking to children or in casual conversations. Commonly paired with words like 'hands,' 'surfaces,' or 'places.' Not scientific—prefer 'contaminated' or 'unsanitary' in formal writing. Don't confuse with 'germinate' (grow from a seed).
Spanish: lleno de gérmenes - sucio (por gérmenes)Portuguese (BR): cheio de germes - contaminadoPortuguese (PT): cheio de germes - infetadoChinese (Simplified): 有细菌的 - 带菌的Chinese (Traditional): 有細菌的 - 帶菌的Hindi: कीटाणुओं से भरा - जर्मयुक्तArabic: مليء بالجراثيم - ملوث بالجراثيمBengali: জীবাণুযুক্ত - ময়লাযুক্তRussian: грязный (с микробами) - заражённый микробамиJapanese: ばい菌だらけの - 汚いVietnamese: dính đầy vi trùng - bẩnKorean: 세균이 많은 - 더러운Turkish: mikroplu - kirliUrdu: جرثومے والا - گنداIndonesian: penuh kuman - kotor
جمل نموذجية
My hands feel germy after playing outside.
basic
The kitchen sponge is very germy.
basic
Don't touch that germy door handle!
basic
After riding the subway, I always feel a bit germy.
natural
Kids’ toys get really germy if you don’t clean them often.
natural
The hotel remote was so germy, I covered it with a tissue to use it.
natural