Nghĩa của từ uncultured bằng Tiếng Việt

@uncultured /'ʌn'kʌltʃəd/
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Đặt câu có từ "uncultured"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "uncultured", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ uncultured, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ uncultured trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Anh - Việt

1. Uncultured marine Alveolate Group II DH144-EKD14 Uncultured marine Alveolate Group II DH145-EKD13 Uncultured marine Alveolate Group II DH145-EKD16 Uncultured marine Alveolate Group II DH145-EKD18 Uncultured marine Alveolate Group II DH145-EKD20 Uncultured marine Alveolate Group …

2. An uncultured man with Boorish manners

3. What does Barbarian mean? An insensitive, uncultured person

4. What does Boorishly mean? In a boorish manner; uncultured

5. What does Barbarity mean? The condition of being uncivilized or uncultured

6. Booboisie (plural Booboisies) A social class made up of ignorant and uncultured people.

7. Boor, a peasant or uncultured person; one who lacks in education, knowledge, refinement and social graces

8. Later also "uncultured, rude" (1590s); then "unartificial, natural"… See definitions of Artless.

9. With Anu Garg Booboisie PRONUNCIATION: (boo-bwa-ZEE) MEANING: noun: Ignorant or uncultured people regarded as a class

10. BARBAROUS Meaning: "uncivilized, uncultured, ignorant," from Latin Barbarus "strange, foreign, barbarous," from Greek… See definitions of barbarous.

11. Indeed, early Benga was known as music of the “rural and uncultured.” The expressions used by musicians and fans alike,

12. Barbaric (comparative more Barbaric, superlative most Barbaric) of or relating to a barbarian ; uncivilized , uncultured or uncouth Killing doctors is Barbaric .

13. Barbarous can describe a terrible, savage act, like mass murder or torture, but it can also describe people who are uncultured.

14. He and his writers railed against the "Booboisie," the term he coined to describe the uncultured and witless who ran the country

15. Barbarize (third-person singular simple present Barbarizes, present participle barbarizing, simple past and past participle barbarized) To cause to become savage or uncultured

16. Barbarize (third-person singular simple present barbarizes, present participle barbarizing, simple past and past participle Barbarized) To cause to become savage or uncultured

17. Uncivilized, wild, rough, gross, savage, primitive, rude, coarse, vulgar, barbarian, philistine, uneducated, brutish, unsophisticated, uncouth, uncultivated, unpolished, uncultured, unmannered He thought the poetry of Whitman Barbarous.

18. Mencken coined the term “Booboisie” —a combination of the words boob and bourgeoisie–by which he meant the ignorant and uncultured middle class

19. The informal way Australians use language, using ‘ockerisms’ (an ocker is an uncultured Australian) and abbreviations, is also believed to stem from convict times – in The Australian

20. Boorish Meaning: "uncouth, uncultured, rustic, so low-bred in habits as to be offensive," 1560s, from boor (n.) + -ish.… See definitions of Boorish.

21. As nouns the difference between boobocracy and Booboisie is that boobocracy is rule by the ignorant and uneducated while Booboisie is a social class made up of ignorant and uncultured people.

22. Barbaric was used with the meaning “foreign, strange, outlandish,” Barbarous first meant what the Romans meant by it, “not Greek or Latin,” but it soon came to mean “uncultured, savage,” and by …

23. Barbaric (adj.) late 15c., "uncultured, uncivilized, unpolished," from French barbarique (15c.), from Latin Barbaricus "foreign, strange, outlandish," from Greek barbarikos "like a foreigner," from barbaros "foreign, rude" (see barbarian (n.))

24. Barbaric was used with the meaning “foreign, strange, outlandish,” Barbarous first meant what the Romans meant by it, “not Greek or Latin,” but it soon came to mean “uncultured, savage,” and by the 1580s had taken on the sense of “savagely cruel.” The noun barbarian entered English earlier than …

25. 1880, Charles Wells, “Introduction to the second edition”, in James Redhouse, Redhouse's Turkish Dictionary, page vii: The original Turkish tongue was somewhat Barbarous, but extremely forcible and concise when spoken.· uncivilized, uncultured 1801, Isaac Watts, The improvement of the mind, or A supplement

26. And it is to this latter fact that yet another remarkable peculiarity of Hinduism is mainly due-namely, that in no other system in the world is the chasm more vast which separates the religion of the higher, cultured, and thoughtful classes from that of the lower, uncultured, and unthinking masses" (Brahmanism and Hinduism, 1891, p