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Meanings of rudest kind in English
We have no meanings for "rudest kind" in our records yet.
Usage of rudest kind in English
1
Their music scarcely deserves the name; the instruments being of the rudestkind.
2
All the surveying was of course of the very rudestkind.
3
Their houses and furnishings were of the rudestkind.
4
There were only the rudestkind of shacks, which served for houses, stores and hotels.
5
The cabin wherein the three were seated was of the rudestkind, but everything was scrupulously clean.
6
This farming was of the rudestkind.
7
The walls were covered with paintings and sculpture of the rudestkind, and with a few funeral tablets.
8
But I doubt if Peter was sincerely musical; in his youth he heard only music of the rudestkind.
9
They are good for only the rudestkind of labor, unless they are kept and trained at heavy expense.
10
Their weapons and implements are of wood, stone, and bone, and they have not even the rudestkind of pottery.
11
The furniture of the early houses was of the rudestkind, since only the most necessary articles could be brought in the wagons.
12
The English from their high towers kept up a disastrous fire, which, though their artillery was of the rudestkind, did great execution.
13
Of the mechanic arts, little was known, and the people were almost exclusively agricultural, while the machinery used in agriculture was of the rudestkind.
14
"The whole structure," says Captain Mudge, "was wrought with the rudestkind of implements, and the labour bestowed on it must have been immense.