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vulgarian

[ UK /vʌlɡˈe‍əɹi‍ən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a vulgar person (especially someone who makes a vulgar display of wealth)

How To Use vulgarian In A Sentence

  • The ascendancy of laddish vulgarianism might not be great news, but it's probably more tolerable than the mass neurosis that we suffered through from the mid '80s.
  • We mercilessly critiqued one another, and explored weird mixes of Bizarro, Horror-eroticism, metafictional, vulgarian, bloody stories, and things that are yet to have names. Author of "HPL and His Legacy" : The Lovecraft News Network
  • And in this supreme folly I lived the days, now in the Mediterranean, now cruising round the coast of England, now flying of a sudden to Paris with one they might have called a vulgarian, but one I chose to know. The Iron Pirate A Plain Tale of Strange Happenings on the Sea
  • There's the arty Bohemian society of the Verdurins, the most hideous vulgarians in literature.
  • But you see, I am not an American vulgarian like this Jackie character.
  • Yet at the same time he couldn't stop himself from playing the vulgarian and disgracing himself.
  • Is this a vulgarian conspiracy by the coalition to thwart the promotion of poetry throughout England? Letters: Rural theatre and poetry hit by cuts
  • Technical polish was too often sacrificed to visceral excitement and excessively schmaltzy rubato - in short, the sort of interpretation that suits the image of Liszt the vulgarian. Pianists Andre Watts and Evgeny Kissin offer Liszt recitals
  • He saw himself as a ludicrous figure, acting as a pennyboy for his aunts, a nervous, well-meaning sentimentalist, orating to vulgarians and idealising his own clownish lusts, the pitiable fatuous fellow he had caught a glimpse of in the mirror. Dubliners
  • Yet at the same time he couldn't stop himself from playing the vulgarian and disgracing himself.
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