different between tasteless vs uncouth
tasteless
English
Etymology
taste +? -less
Adjective
tasteless (comparative more tasteless, superlative most tasteless)
- Having no flavour; bland, insipid
- Lacking delicacy, refinement and good taste; unbecoming, crass.
Derived terms
- tastelessness
- tastelessly
Translations
Anagrams
- stateless
tasteless From the web:
- tasteless meaning
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uncouth
English
Etymology
From Middle English uncouth, from Old English unc?þ (“unknown; unfamiliar; strange”), from Proto-Germanic *unkunþaz (“unknown”), equivalent to un- +? couth.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n?ku??/
- Rhymes: -u??
Adjective
uncouth (comparative uncouther or more uncouth, superlative uncouthest or most uncouth)
- (archaic) Unfamiliar, strange, foreign.
- Antonym: (obsolete) couth
- Clumsy, awkward.
- Synonym: fremd
- Unrefined, crude.
- Synonyms: impolite; see also Thesaurus:impolite
- Antonym: couth
Derived terms
- uncouthness
Related terms
Translations
Anagrams
- untouch
uncouth From the web:
- uncouth meaning
- uncouth what is the definition
- what does uncouth woman meaning
- what does uncouth
- what is uncouth behaviour
- what do uncouth mean
- what does uncouth person mean
- what is uncouth synonym
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