different between oafish vs rustic

oafish

English

Etymology

oaf +? -ish

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?o?f??/

Adjective

oafish (comparative more oafish, superlative most oafish)

  1. Characteristic of or resembling an oaf; clumsy, stupid.

Derived terms

  • oafishness

Translations

oafish From the web:

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rustic

English

Alternative forms

  • (obsolete) rustick, rusticke, rustique

Etymology

From Latin r?sticus. Doublet of roister.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???st?k/
  • Rhymes: -?st?k

Adjective

rustic (comparative more rustic, superlative most rustic)

  1. Country-styled or pastoral; rural.
    • 1800, William Wordsworth, We are Seven
      She had a rustic, woodland air.
    • late 1700s — Robert Burns, Behold, My Love, How Green the Groves
      The Princely revel may survey
      Our rustic dance wi' scorn.
    • 1818 — Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus Ch. I
      With his permission my mother prevailed on her rustic guardians to yield their charge to her. They were fond of the sweet orphan. Her presence had seemed a blessing to them, but it would be unfair to her to keep her in poverty and want when Providence afforded her such powerful protection.
    • 1820 — Washington Irving, Rural Life in England in The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon
      To this mingling of cultivated and rustic society may also be attributed the rural feeling that runs through British literature.
  2. Unfinished or roughly finished.
  3. Crude, rough.
  4. Simple; artless; unaffected.
    • 1704, Alexander Pope, A Discourse on Pastoral Poetry
      the manners not too polite nor too rustic

Derived terms

  • rustic moth
  • rustic work
  • rusticity

Translations

Noun

rustic (plural rustics)

  1. A (sometimes unsophisticated) person from a rural area.
    • 1901, Edmund Selous, Bird Watching, p. 226
      The cause of these stampedes was generally undiscoverable; but sometimes, when the birds stayed some time down on the water, the figure of a rustic would at length appear, walking behind a hedge, along a path bounding the little meadow.
    • 1906, Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Nigel, Ch IX
      The King looked at the motionless figure, at the little crowd of hushed expectant rustics beyond the bridge, and finally at the face of Chandos, which shone with amusement.
    • 1927-29, Mahatma Gandhi, An Autobiography or The Story of my Experiments with Truth, Part V, The Stain of Indigo, translated 1940 by Mahadev Desai
      Thus this ignorant, unsophisticated but resolute agriculturist captured me. So early in 1917, we left Calcutta for Champaran, looking just like fellow rustics.
  2. A noctuoid moth.
  3. Any of various nymphalid butterflies having brown and orange wings, especially Cupha erymanthis.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Citrus, Curtis, Turcis, citrus, rictus

Romanian

Etymology

From French rustique, from Latin rusticus.

Adjective

rustic m or n (feminine singular rustic?, masculine plural rustici, feminine and neuter plural rustice)

  1. rustic

Declension

rustic From the web:

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  • what's rustica pizza
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  • rustica meaning
  • what rustic bread mean
  • what rustico mean
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