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ragged (adj.)

"rough, shaggy," c. 1300, past-participle adjective as though from a verb form of rag (n.). Compare Latin pannosus "ragged, wrinkly," from pannus "piece of cloth." But the word might reflect a broader, older meaning; perhaps from or reinforced by Old Norse raggaðr "shaggy," via Old English raggig "shaggy, bristly, rough" (which, Barnhart writes, "was almost surely developed from Scandinavian"). Of clothes, early 14c.; of persons, late 14c. To run (someone) ragged is from 1915. Related: Raggedly; raggedness.

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Definitions of ragged from WordNet

ragged (adj.)
being or dressed in clothes that are worn or torn;
a ragged tramp
clothes as ragged as a scarecrow's
ragged (adj.)
worn out from stress or strain;
run ragged
ragged (adj.)
having an irregular outline;
text set with ragged right margins
herded the class into a ragged line
From wordnet.princeton.edu