rough-draw

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Verb[edit]

rough-draw (third-person singular simple present rough-draws, present participle rough-drawing, simple past rough-drew, past participle rough-drawn)

  1. To sketch roughly; to make a quick, unpolished version.
    • 1670, John Dryden, Almanzor and Almahide, or the Conquest of Granada by the Spaniards, a Tragedy:
      His victories we scarce could keep in view, Or polish them so fast as he rough-drew.
    • 1812, Sir Walter Scott, A Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts:
      My pen is not a fit pencil in the least to rough-draw the great jubilee with which the hearts of the people of Rome were filled, when, on Monday morning, the twentieth of June, it began to be whispered about the city, that so deserving a prelate had been created the sacred Monarch of Christendome;
    • 1968, John Cotton, Larzer Ziff, John Cotton on the Churches of New England, page 172:
      The case standing hereabouts (as near as I could rough-draw the state of it in this instantaneous haste) let us I beseech you be rather Irenei than Cassandri.
    • 1998, Hermann Josef Real, Rudolf Freiburg, Arno Löffler, Swift: The Enigmatic Dean, page 42:
      Whether he worked fast or slow, at the flower of the day or not, it appears that from the beginning to the end of his career as a poet, Swift first rough-drew his verse and then revisited it in order to add, blot, and alter.