From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishshadyshad‧y /ˈʃeɪdi/ adjective (comparative shadier, superlative shadiest) 1 DARKprotected from the sun or producing shade a shady street It was nice and shady under the trees.► see thesaurus at dark2 SCCSUSPECTprobably dishonest or illegal SYN suspicious a shady character She’s been involved in some shady deals.
Examples from the Corpus
shady• We'd suspected for a while she was involved in something a bit shady.• His acceptance of a huge loan from a shady businessman looks suspicious to say the least.• The dark, leafless cottonwoods and rustling wind give the shady canyon a decidedly spooky feel.• And he likes to see him-self as a romantically shady character.• It allows them to keep a beadier one on the shady characters behind the scenes.• These plants will grow best in shady conditions.• He has been mixed up in a number of shady deals in the Cayman Islands.• She's been involved in some shady deals.• Beyond him up the shady driveway is a three-story country house, a wide verandah all the way around it.• It helped several shady entrepreneurs to buy assets all over the world.• Wealthy nobles inhabited splendid villas surrounded by shady groves and fertile gardens.• From a place on the shady side I watched the most forlorn spectacle I have ever seen.• Others sat out on carpets beneath the shady trees enjoying the cool of the evening.• shady treesshady character• And he likes to see him-self as a romantically shady character.• Freddie lived by his wits and he was involved with many shady characters.• A bit of a shady character, and a womanizer.• It allows them to keep a beadier one on the shady characters behind the scenes.