Use of uncouth in Sentences. 28 Examples
The examples include uncouth at the start of sentence, uncouth at the end of sentence and uncouth in the middle of sentence
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uncouth at the end of sentence
- From a distance he looks uncouth.
- She found him loud-mouthed and uncouth.
- He remained heavy and somewhat uncouth.
- To a Japanese, spilling anything is uncouth.
- He would become dreadful, hideous, and uncouth.
- The Chinese disciples of Pareto might have thought him uncouth.
uncouth in the middle of sentence
- He behaves in a most uncouth way.
- His nephew is an uncouth young man.
- The stamp of the uncouth barbarian was on me.
- An uncouth, crude, or ill-bred person; a boor.
- She may embarrass you with her uncouth behavior.
- The city's elite viewed her as an uncouth farm girl.
- An earthy , uncouth, servile peasant creature old Katy was.
- If she knew it, green and uncouth as she was, Pertwee would know it also.
- We didn't know this. It has been spoken by the uncouth swain, a rustic shepherd.
- Because he got rid of his ignorant and uncouth sweetness, he is no longer a boy.
- He had seemed puzzled but intrigued by the clogged, uncouth sketches of peasants.
- Others see us as overly materialistic, somewhat uncouth and lacking in social graces.
- The chapter was very long, and consisted entirely of names, uncouth and difficult to pronounce.
- Even as she sank, she would know the woman was still leaning forward, great uncouth lump, writing.
- Philip could not conceal from himself that the other clerks ill - paid and uncouth were more useful.
- The countryside was his enemy: uncouth heather and highwayman copses kept taking his jewel and hiding it.
- This led them to conclude that they were uncouth, filthy creatures who barely knew how to look after themselves.
- Despite his uncouth manner and four-letter language, no editor is more courted by senior Conservative politicians.
- Before visiting the remote north, I had rather expected the folk there to be rough, uncouth, possibly even hostile.
- At the very end of the poem, the uncouth swain "rose, and twitch't his Mantle blue: tomorrow to fresh Woods and Pastures new."
- He could have begun Lycidas with this, with something like a description of the uncouth swain: "Oh, let me tell you about this uncouth swain."
- With its huge, uncouth, gnarled arms and fingers sprawling unsymmetrically , it stood an aged, angry, and scornful monster among the smiling birches.
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