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inartistic

[ UK /ɪnɑːtˈɪstɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. lacking aesthetic sensibility

How To Use inartistic In A Sentence

  • Old portraits and any kind of inartistic picture or print were brought forth to gratify the eye unaccustomed to such monotony. Social life in old New Orleans : being recollections of my girlhood,
  • They are unintellectual and inartistic: hobbits, in a word - no wonder The Lord of the Rings is said to be their favourite novel.
  • His literary style was influenced by that of Isocrates, but he is a much less careful writer, being often negligent in the matter of hiatus, and inartistic in the composition of his sentences.
  • The document of the 21st May 1930 cannot be regarded as other than inartistic, and may appear repellent to the trained sense of an equity draftsman.
  • As the era's most vocal horticulturist, Robinson decried one of the favourite tricks of architects, the clipping and aligning of trees, as ‘barbarous, needless, and inartistic.’
  • What is remarkable, by contrast, is how unsympathetic and inartistic his spouse and offspring appear to be.
  • Why are other magazines so successful in filling up their copies with lucrative advertising and this one only attracts a few inelegant, inartistic, advertisers?
  • In fact, for him to die elsewhere would be inartistic and insincere. The Gold Hunters of the North
  • These are not illegitimate pressures, even if they may seem inartistic, in a business that has never offered itself as simply an art.
  • Whatever their source, there was, either in the composition itself or in his mode of playing, not a little of the inartistic, that is, the lawless. Mary Marston
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