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    • Your house always has a stench. No matter how much cleaning you pretend to do, the rooms in your home always have a slightly odorous stench. While scented candles, air fresheners, and scented sprays can mask the smell for a short period of time, the room always goes back to stinking.
    • You eat in bed. There are a few exceptions to eating in bed: if you’re being treated to breakfast in bed on special occasions or if you’re sick. But your bed should not take the place of a dining room table.
    • You can’t remember the last time you washed your sheets. You think your sheets look pretty clean (in spite of the crumbs), but you can’t remember the last time you washed them.
    • Spring cleaning is just a saying. Some people give their entire house or apartment a thorough scrubbing at least once a year. To you though, spring-cleaning sounds like a nice idea or just a myth.
  1. the filth [plural] (British English, slang, offensive) an offensive word for the police Word Origin Old English fȳlth ‘rotting matter, rottenness’, also ‘corruption, obscenity’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vuilte , also to foul .

  2. Filth definition: . See examples of FILTH used in a sentence.

  3. Filth is a disgusting amount of dirt. 2. People refer to words or pictures, usually ones relating to sex, as filth when they think they are very disgusting and rude.

  4. www.imdb.com › title › tt1450321Filth (2013) - IMDb

    Filth: Directed by Jon S. Baird. With James McAvoy, Jamie Bell, Eddie Marsan, Imogen Poots. A corrupt, junkie cop with bipolar disorder attempts to manipulate his way through a promotion in order to win back his wife and daughter while also fighting his own inner demons.

    • (117K)
    • Action, Comedy, Crime
    • Jon S. Baird
    • 2014-04-24
  5. Filth. A drug-addled, manipulative misanthrope (James McAvoy) begins to experience increasingly severe hallucinations as he tries to solve the murder of a Japanese student. Watch Filth with a ...

    • (97)
    • Crime, Drama, Comedy
    • R
  6. filth. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English filth /fɪlθ/ noun 1 [uncountable] very offensive language, stories, or pictures about sex I don’t know how you can watch that filth! 2 [uncountable] dirt, especially a lot of it a mound of filth and rubbish people living in filth Passing cars covered his shoes with filth. 3 → the ...

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