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civilised

[ UK /sˈɪvəlˌa‍ɪzd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. marked by refinement in taste and manners
    cultivated speech
    polite society
    cultured Bostonians
    cultured tastes
    a genteel old lady
  2. having a high state of culture and development both social and technological
    terrorist acts that shocked the civilized world

How To Use civilised In A Sentence

  • Before this ugly edifice, and between it and the wheel-track of the street, was a grass-plot, much overgrown with burdock, pig-weed, apple-pern, and such unsightly vegetation, which evidently found something congenial in the soil that had so early borne the black flower of civilised society, a prison. The Scarlet Letter
  • The more civilised make up of canvass or "gunny bags" stuffed with hay and provided with cross bars, a rude packsaddle, which is admirably calculated to gall the animal's back. First Footsteps in East Africa
  • We who live in the overcivilised world know that we have lost something. Times, Sunday Times
  • The paragraph holds luminously good still for either Bobby – Jones or Moore:What we talk about here is not the hero as sportsman, but that something which a civilised community hungered for and found: the best performer in the world who was also hero as human being, the gentle, wholly self-sufficient male. My dream job as Bobby Moore's minder for a fortnight | Frank Keating
  • But what we do now know is that there endures, in many apparently civilised quarters, a simmering rage of misogyny and mistrust. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nathreee's Thoughts - dreams about wild animals in civilised surroundings Dreams about wild animals in civilised surroundings
  • It also opens a wider question as to whether civilised societies could so quickly revert to primitive behaviour.
  • It could no longer be represented by such straightforward dualities as European versus native, or civilised versus wild.
  • The more civilised make up of canvass or “gunny bags” stuffed with hay and provided with cross bars, a rude packsaddle, which is admirably calculated to gall the animal’s back. First footsteps in East Africa
  • RH Tawney.had the measure of this kind of bobbins about 80 years ago: "While natural endowments differ profoundly, it is the mark of a civilised society to aim at eliminating such inequalities as have their source, not in individual differences, but in its own organisation. The Guardian World News
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