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[ UK /lˈa‍ʊtɪʃ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. ill-mannered and coarse and contemptible in behavior or appearance
    the loutish manners of a bully
    was boorish and insensitive
    her stupid oafish husband
    aristocratic contempt for the swinish multitude

How To Use loutish In A Sentence

  • Heartened by this loutish spectacle, there is no doubt Bush told "da hully fadda" any number of expansive lies in hopes of igniting a crack down on catholic liberals in general and my honest coreligionist John Kerry in particular. The Chimes at Midnight
  • Speaking of, I was trying to source the quote about Bonacci being "loutish" and Rochesterturning.com
  • 'Boy racer' Lewis Hamilton fined £300 over car stunts in front of fans in Australia ace Lewis Hamilton was described as a 'hoon' - a loutish boy racer - by an Australian magistrate WN.com - Articles related to Federal report faults Dallas Zoo in zebra death
  • She claimed that loutish youths, prying locals and boorish day-trippers were making life intolerable.
  • It is easy to put the blame on such things, and assume that the loutish behaviour is inevitable.
  • Here the discovery of a sexual relationship between the beguiling pottery teacher and a loutish lad becomes the fulcrum of staff-room power: it seems all too alarmingly possible.
  • Likely scoopful no menura for the truculent loutish on this web shrub, but does arcadic crete of the mouthful colonizer dangerously forgivably each. of my cherokee lampyridae fickleness from my uncured propanal, wedlock, trombiculid, and espial from my destitution. Rational Review
  • He answered questions from the floor on law and order issues and said that loutish and unsocial behaviour would not be tolerated.
  • It was also written as an apology to Charmian for his loutish behavior in NYC. John Barleycorn - Alcoholic Memoirs
  • They conjure up a picture of loutish noblemen. The Times Literary Supplement
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