unmannerly

  • 51Fruit of the Holy Spirit — The Fruit of the Spirit is a concept from the Christian New Testament of The Bible, specifically the Epistle to the Galatians chapter 5. Fruit is used to mean end product or harvest , and hence the passage describes what the writer expects to… …

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  • 52Silence Dogood — was a false persona used by Benjamin Franklin to get his work published. Contents 1 History 2 Letters 1 2 Dogood s background 3 References 4 Exte …

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  • 53Charles Lyon, 6th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne — (c. 1699 – 11 May 1728) was a Scottish peer and the son of John Lyon, 4th Earl of Strathmore. His exact date of birth is unknown but he was baptised on 12 July 1699. Although his brother the third son and fifth Earl was to display the family’s… …

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  • 54Carnegie of Finhaven — is famous for his trial for the murder of Charles Lyon, 6th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne which resulted in the not guilty verdict becoming a recognised part of Scots law and establishment the right of Scots juries to judge the whole case and… …

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  • 55unmannerliness — See unmannerly. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 56boor — /boor/, n. 1. a churlish, rude, or unmannerly person. 2. a country bumpkin; rustic; yokel. 3. peasant. 4. Boer. [1545 55; < D boer or LG bur (c. G Bauer farmer), deriv. of Gmc *bu to dwell, build, cultivate; see ER1; cf. BOND2] Syn. 1 …

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  • 57ill-bred — /il bred /, adj. showing lack of good social breeding; unmannerly; rude. [1615 25] * * * …

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  • 58impertinence — /im perr tn euhns/, n. 1. unmannerly intrusion or presumption; insolence. 2. impertinent quality or action. 3. something impertinent, as an act or statement. 4. an impertinent person. 5. irrelevance, inappropriateness, or absurdity. [1595 1605;&#8230; …

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  • 59incondite — /in kon dit, duyt/, adj. 1. ill constructed; unpolished: incondite prose. 2. crude; rough; unmannerly. [1530 40; < L inconditus, equiv. to in IN 3 + conditus ptp. of condere to put in, restore (con CON + di put, set + tus ptp. suffix)] * * * …

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  • 60rough — roughly, adv. roughness, n. /ruf/, adj., rougher, roughest, n., adv., v. adj. 1. having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road. 2. shaggy or coarse: a dog with a&#8230; …

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