Uncouth

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Uncouth.
it’s A 7 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: RAW, RUDE, CRASS, CRUDE, VULGAR, LOUTISH, ILLBRED, BARBARIC.

Last seen on: –Newsday.com Crossword – Apr 11 2021
Universal Crossword – Jul 28 2020
Newsday.com Crossword – Apr 29 2020
Wall Street Journal Crossword – August 24 2019 – What’s Cool?
Premier Sunday – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Mar 31 2019

Random information on the term “RAW”:

A raw material, also known as a feedstock or most correctly unprocessed material, is a basic material that is used to produce goods, finished products, energy, or intermediate materials which are feedstock for future finished products. As feedstock, the term connotes these materials are bottleneck assets and are highly important with regards to producing other products. An example of this is crude oil, which is a raw material and a feedstock used in the production of industrial chemicals, fuels, plastics, and pharmaceutical goods; lumber is a raw material used to produce a variety of products including furniture.

The term “raw material” denotes materials in minimally processed or unprocessed in states; e.g., raw latex, crude oil, cotton, coal, raw biomass, iron ore, air, logs, or seawater i.e. “…any product of agriculture, forestry, fishing and any other mineral that is in its natural form or which has undergone the transformation required to prepare it for internationally marketing in substantial volumes.”

RAW on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “CRASS”:

Steve Ignorant, born Steven Williams in 1957, is a singer and artist. He co-founded the anarcho-punk band Crass with Penny Rimbaud in 1977. After Crass stopped performing in 1984, he has worked with other groups including Conflict, Schwartzeneggar, Stratford Mercenaries, and Current 93 as well as being an occasional solo performer.

He is also a sculptor, and has worked as a traditional Punch and Judy performer using the name Professor Ignorant. In recent years he has developed an interest in the history of traditional London music hall performance.

On 24 and 25 November 2007 he performed Crass’s entire The Feeding of the 5000 live at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire, backed by guest musicians. Other members of Crass were not involved in these concerts. “I acknowledge and respect Steve’s right to do this”, Rimbaud said, “but I do regard it as a betrayal of the Crass ethos”. Ignorant had a different view; “I don’t have to justify what I do. (…) Plus, most of the lyrics are still relevant today. And remember that three-letter word, ‘fun’?”

CRASS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “VULGAR”:

A barbarism is a non-standard word, expression or pronunciation in a language, particularly one regarded as an error in morphology, while a solecism is an error in syntax. The label was originally applied to mixing Ancient Greek or Latin with other languages. It expanded to indicate any inappropriate words or expressions in classical studies, and eventually to any language considered unpolished or rude. The term is used mainly for the written language. With no accepted technical meaning in modern linguistics, the term is little used by contemporary descriptive scientists.

The word barbarism was originally used by the Greeks for foreign terms used in their language. (“Barbarism” is related to the word “barbarian”; the ideophone “bar-bar-bar” was the ancient Greek equivalent of modern English “blah-blah-blah”, meant to sound like gibberish — hence the negative connotation of both barbarian and barbarism).[full citation needed]

The earliest use of the word in English to describe inappropriate usage was in the sixteenth century to refer to mixing other languages with Latin or Greek, especially in texts treating Classics. By the seventeenth century barbarism had taken on a more general, less precise sense of unsuitable language. In The History of Philosophy, for example, Thomas Stanley declares, “Among the faults of speech is Barbarisme, a phrase not in use with the best persons, and Solecisme, a speech incoherently framed” [sic]. Hybrid words, which combine affixes or other elements borrowed from multiple languages, were sometimes decried as barbarism. Thus the authors of the Encyclopædia Metropolitana criticized the French word linguistique (“linguistics”) as “more than ordinary barbarism, for the Latin substantive lingua is here combined, not merely with one, but with two Greek particles”. Such mixing is generally considered standard in contemporary English.

VULGAR on Wikipedia