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rudely

[ UK /ɹˈuːdli/ ]
[ US /ˈɹudɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an impolite manner
    he treated her impolitely

How To Use rudely In A Sentence

  • It was a simple rectangle of crudely mounded basalt rocks, a distinctive arrangement reminiscent of the way Samoans and other Polynesians marked their dead in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
  • On that day people give each other sugar skulls with a name label crudely pasted on the forehead.
  • I think we have to distinguish those narratives which crudely manipulate fear or repulsion and disgust from that which Lovecraft correctly calls ‘the weird tale’.
  • The handle was just a sharply carved crescent moon shape, crudely cut from a tarnishing piece of bronze.
  • An exceptionally creepy two-parter begins tonight with various crudely dismembered body parts of young women getting washed up in the Thames or chewed by urban foxes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bridge was a line of old barges that had been crudely tied together, the deck a mishmash of welded patches of dented rusting metal.
  • He rudely rejected her kind offer of help.
  • They have a small thin adulterated gold coin, rudely stamped with Arabic characters, called mas or massiah. The History of Sumatra Containing An Account Of The Government, Laws, Customs And Manners Of The Native Inhabitants
  • Revenge is sweet, saith the phrasemonger, and to the old lady whose discipline had been flouted and whose amour propre had been rudely shaken it was very sweet indeed. Who Cares? a story of adolescence
  • Marcasite, when viewed in hand specimen, tends to form crudely banded masses or massive aggregates.
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