caddish

[ UK /kˈædɪʃ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. offensively discourteous
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How To Use caddish In A Sentence

  • He wondered whether he ought to leave her alone, but that seemed a caddish thing to do. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • Michaelis was the last word in what was caddish and bounderish. Lady Chatterley's Lover
  • Even though I don't usually watch ABC's "The Bachelor," I could hardly avoid hearing about the pop culture tempest created when the handsome fellow turned "caddish" and dumped Melissa, the woman he originally picked as his "future bride" in favor of his second place choice, Molly. J. Weekly
  • This yankee barely understands the meaning of "caddish" and he is completely baffled by this "potty peer" thing. House of Eratosthenes
  • Aiden T is undeniably caddishly rakishly lovely, but there is something childlike and very sweet about Samuel Barnett as little Mr Millais. Desperate Romantics
  • He would bemean himself sufficiently to overlook Frau's caddishness. Villa Elsa A Story of German Family Life
  • As Mark Darcy, Firth played an illusive dreamboat named after his own television triumph as Austen's hero; Grant's portrayal of the caddish Daniel Cleaver was an amused nod at his own popular persona. Hugh Grant and Colin Firth, the screen's leading Englishmen at 50
  • Following particularly caddish behaviour from the cad of the novel, Tansy embarks on a solo trip around the world, during which she chances upon a number of people, doesn't like any of them, then discovers they're not so very bad after all.
  • It seems to be bad boy season right now – "caddish" Charles Spencer snaring yet another fiancee, Shane Warne upsetting Liz Hurley, Berlusconi… being Berlusconi. Idolising bad boys makes Charlies of us all | Barbara Ellen
  • As the village suffers its first losses at the frontline, conscientious objector George (Thomas), a teacher, is ostracised for refusing to dish out corporal punishment at the local school, flat-footed Cecil (Bird) bemoans a lack of beer, and caddish, cowardly Bert (Sweet) sets his cap at a grieving widow. Chickens: What The Inbetweeners did next
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