单词 | unmannered |
释义 | unmanneredadj.ΘΚΠ society > authority > lack of power > [adjective] > not regulated or controlled unordainedc1390 unordinalc1400 unmannered1435 unorderly1566 uncontrolled1594 unmanaged1598 unordinate1610 unregulated?1623 unlicensed1680 unpoliced1753 the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > lack of moderation or restraint > [adjective] outragea1325 unskilwisea1340 unskilfulc1370 delavyc1380 unordinatea1398 excess?a1400 untemperatea1425 unmannered1435 immoderate1497 insolent?a1500 surfeitc1500 intemperate1508 exceedinga1513 unsober1535 intemperant1542 distemperate1557 distempered1587 intemperous1614 acrasial1845 R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 94 Lufe forsoth of kynsmen, if it be vn-manerd [L. immoderatus], fleschly affeccione it is cald..; And if it be manerd, kyndely it is calde. 2. a. Of a person: lacking in manners; = unmannerly adj. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > [adjective] > ill-mannered unthewedc1175 ill-mannered1422 unmannerlya1425 mannerlessa1500 unmannered?1518 inhonest1534 ungraciousa1535 unrude?1552 misnurtured1553 menseless1568 misleared1578 mismannered1615 unmanneredly1650 rag-mannered1698 ?1518 A. Barclay tr. D. Mancinus Myrrour Good Maners sig. F.iv But suche of vyle maners are called commonly Uyle persons vnmanered [L. inverecundos] and wretches without shame. 1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III i. ii. 39 Vnmanerd dog, stand thou when I command. View more context for this quotation ?1610 J. Fletcher Faithfull Shepheardesse ii. sig. E1v I feare I am too much vnmannerd, farre to rude. 1693 J. Dryden tr. Juvenal in J. Dryden et al. tr. Juvenal Satires vi. 110 No Pray'r can bend her, no Excuse appease. Th' unmanner'd Malefactor, is Arraign'd. 1745 J. Mason Treat. Self-knowl. i. ix. 73 He is not only ignorant and unmanner'd, but unsufferably vain. 1823 W. Scott St. Ronan's Well III. v. 133 This awkward, ill-dressed, unmannered dowdy. 1854 S. T. Dobell Balder i. 5 Thou grim wall Hemming her in with thine unmannered rock. 1879 G. Meredith Egoist xix He knew scholars to be an unmannered species. 1938 Bull. Amer. Libr. Assoc. Oct. 690/2 The unmannered wretch who chews gum and shows a bit too much swagger may need a good book more than a reprimand. 2010 Philadelphia Daily News (Nexis) 5 Nov. 23 In politics, you always have to deal with the undisciplined and unmannered fellow who screams out in a public venue, ‘You lie!’ b. Of an action, speech, conduct, etc.: characterized by a lack of manners; = unmannerly adj. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > [adjective] > ill-mannered > specifically of conduct, speech, etc. wantona1425 unmannerlyc1450 misnurtured1553 misnurture1597 under-terrestrial1603 unmannered1622 1622 T. Dekker & P. Massinger Virgin Martir i. sig. C3 Durst I presume to embrace, where but to touch With an vnmannerd hand was death? 1690 J. Dryden Don Sebastian iv. 104 What sayst thou of Enriquez? now by Heaven Thou mov'st me more by barely naming him, Than all thy foul unmanner'd scurril taunts. 1770 H. Brooke Fool of Quality V. xvii. 184 He gazed at Louisa with..an unmannered intenseness. a1772 Ess. from Batchelor (1773) II. 146 His superior abilities..were never exerted with unmannered insolence. 1836 J. H. Newman in J. H. Newman et al. Lyra Apostolica xxiv. 27 A ready prey, as though in absent mood They calmly move, nor hear the unmannered mirth. 1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust II. iii. 219 In most unmannered anger ye Have conjured hither pictures of the shapes of dread. 1934 Mason City (Iowa) Globe-Gaz. 10 July 10/1 His unmannered utterances and untactful policies were not to Oklahoma's liking. 2011 R. F. McDermott Revelry, Rivalry, & Longing for Goddesses of Bengal ii. 47 With ‘polite’ society frowning upon the raucous and unmannered deportment of the lower orders. 3. Not affected or artificial in style or character. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > unaffectedness or naturalness > [adjective] > not contrived or artificial unartificial1603 artless1622 unarted1628 inartificial1656 unartful1670 unaffected1712 unstrained1748 unmannered1804 unschooled1815 wilding1884 1804 tr. J. F. de Bourgoing in Edinb. Rev. Oct. 132 Its [sc. urbanity's] place is well supplied by this unmannered frankness, this sincerity which proclaims and inspires confidence. 1813 C. Lamb in Examiner 6 June 365 The plain unmannered old Nobility of the..Plays of Shakspeare. 1869 Atlantic Monthly Feb. 264 A diction as distinctively his own as it is inartificial and unmannered. 1940 T. Wolfe & E. C. Aswell You can't go Home Again i. i. 9 The gay insouciance of her unmannered settings. 2007 Opera Now Mar. 108/4 Cori Ellison's delightfully unmannered and infinitely singable English translation of the libretto adds to the charm of the staging. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2014; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.1435 |
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