0 behaving in a rude, unpleasant way:
She thought he was loud-mouthed and uncouth.
1 (of a person or a person's behavior) rude and unpleasant
Another decried the protesters' ' uncouth behaviour ' and their ' spitting and cursing ' (p. 144).
The uncouth and unsanitary sparrow lived in any available cavity, furnishing its filthy and unsightly ' ' lodgings ' ' and ' 'tenements ' ' with ' ' any rubbish.
These rebels - uncouth, brutal, difficult to grasp and hard to sympathise with - are unlikely to attract analyses that seek to understand the sources of their grievances.
But in recent centuries prestige turned into ignominy as early inhabitants were now perceived by villagers as uncouth savages from an age before proper humans appeared on the scene.
A challenge was a polite response to an uncouth word or act, which had degraded gentlemanly courtesy, and offered the only means to restore this courtesy.
Lack of compassion is at the base of many journalistic problems with privacy, uncouth methods and similar complaints.
If they were uncouth, the savagery of their surroundings ought to have part of the blame.
We should be absolutely uncouth if we ignored it.