It still stands in all that majestic beauty, but it's a desiccated, aged beauty.
From the theatlantic.com
In an office, a slightly desiccated stuffed piglet sits in a small display case.
From the businessweek.com
Google-generated kadosh is meretricious, offering a desiccated kind of choice.
From the theatlantic.com
You know your conditions are really desiccated when the soil is powdery like mine.
From the ocregister.com
The wood-burning oven results in a four fromage pie with nuked, desiccated cheese.
From the bloomberg.com
Rather, the budget epitomised the desiccated feel of politics in the no-money era.
From the economist.com
In a moldering Venetian palazzo in the late 19th century sit two desiccated women.
From the time.com
Ripe mangoes are often cut into thin layers, desiccated, folded, and then cut.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The deputies searched Cook's backyard and found a half-dozen desiccated pot plants.
From the infowars.com
More examples
Arid: lacking vitality or spirit; lifeless; "a technically perfect but arid performance of the sonata"; "a desiccate romance"; "a prissy and emotionless creature...settles into a mold of desiccated snobbery"-C.J.Rolo
Dehydrate: preserve by removing all water and liquids from; "carry dehydrated food on your camping trip"
Exsiccate: lose water or moisture; "In the desert, you get dehydrated very quickly"
(desiccated) thoroughly dried out; "old boxes of desiccated Cuban cigars"; "dried-out boards beginning to split"
(desiccation) dehydration: dryness resulting from the removal of water
(desiccation) dehydration: the process of extracting moisture
Desiccation is the state of extreme dryness, or the process of extreme drying. A desiccant is a hygroscopic substance that induces or sustains such a state in its local vicinity in a moderately-well sealed container.
To dry; to preserve by drying
(Desiccated) Expansive soils (usually silts and clays) which have developed cracks due to shrinkage from a loss of moisture.