[
UK
/ʌniːsθˈɛtɪk/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
violating aesthetic canons or requirements; deficient in tastefulness or beauty
peered through those inaesthetic spectacles
inaesthetic and quite unintellectual
How To Use unaesthetic In A Sentence
- Despite their unaesthetic design, Fortey fell for the hard - shelled creatures immediately.
- But finding a mass of squirming roundworms is an unaesthetic experience, so fish from infected ponds are banned from being marketed fresh and can be sold only to processing plants, which pay much less.
- Blackheads are one of the nastiest problems of the facial skin, because, like zits and pimples, they give an unaesthetic look.
- He riddled his tales with a child's patois, ‘plenty of prattle, nonsense, and unaesthetic words like ‘baa’ and ‘boo’ in his pockets.
- They have been called the unaesthetic, as well as the lower, senses; but the propriety of these epithets, which is undeniable, is due not to any intrinsic sensuality or baseness of these senses, but to the function which they happen to have in our experience. The Sense of Beauty Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory
- Well, it's unaesthetic, silly and perhaps somewhat cute.
- He shunned the fury of the senses and what Keats called ‘ruffian passion’, which Boucher perceived as not merely unpolished and irrational but also as supremely unaesthetic.
- ‘It's unaesthetic,’ and I suggested she wear something to pack it in.
- With the former we accept an unaesthetic experience and an explanation that is shallow where it is not incomprehensible. Times, Sunday Times
- I was swiftly scolded for my tone: “unbusinesslike, unmannerly, and just plain unaesthetic.” Scents & Sensibility