0 Someone who is uncultured has not had a good education and does not know a lot about art, music, painting, etc.: --
The description of the officer in his room at the inn suggests that he is pointlessly destructive, uncultured, and boorish.
It was considered an uncultured accent until the mid-20th century when this stigma gradually began to fade.
Her laboratory also investigates ancestral components of land plants, evolutionary biology and distributions of uncultured taxa and interactions between viruses and phytoplankton host cells.
Our common taste in amusement, though greatly improved, is still, in the main, rude and uncultured.
It will give the impression that we are an arrogant, uncultured lot.
There was a case recited to me of a young and attractive but uncultured woman who was in dire poverty.
Infants, as uncultured agents, may have motivations for their utterances that are different from those expected by sophisticated adult observers, and the patterns of these utterances may have unexpected features.
Such peaceful, non-threatening values will replace the "sorrows, doubt, and aspirations," not to mention the "fierce fanaticism" of what is clearly meant as a description of the uncultured working-class mind.