Definitionadj. of textures that are rough to the touch or substances consisting of relatively large particles
Last update: February 10, 2017
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He uses coarse language while speaking to youngsters. [adjective]
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I have a coarse skin. [adjective]
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The clothes on my back are coarse. [Please select]
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It may be that poorer people could only afford to buy the coarse wares. [adjective]
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All vulgar fashions of coarse old Oliver's day have gone to the ragbag of worn-out English customs. [adjective]
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We were so coarse a nation, till we learnt manners in exile. [adjective]
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At Fareham House we breathe a finer air, although his lordship's esprit moqueur will not allow us any superiority to the coarse English mob. [adjective]
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The town soon discovered the breach between Lord Fareham and his friend--a breach commented upon with many shoulder-shrugs, and not a few coarse innuendoes. [adjective]
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"Who can tolerate the coarse manners and sea-coal fires of London after the smokeless skies and exquisite courtesies of Parisian good company in the Rue St." [adjective]
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He seems to have confounded coarse caricaturists with refined and thoughtful journalists, even as, in the account of that inshore skirmish, he turns a gun-brig into a British frigate. [adjective]
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