Aún no tenemos significados para "most uncouth".
1The most uncouth of them came under the spell of that mad magic.
2He was the most uncouth looking young man I ever saw.
3Annie had a wonderful fellowship with Nature, liking even its wildest, most uncouth forms.
4They were habited in the most uncouth dresses imaginable.
5He was the first tragedian of the Comédie, and the most uncouth man in France or anywhere else.
6He was the shyest, most reticent, most uncouth and awkward-appearing, homeliest and worst-dressed of any in the crowd.
7As I advanced, some twenty or thirty of the most uncouth-looking fellows imaginable came forward to meet me.
8The man has warm affections at the bottom, though he has a most uncouth manner of making it known.
9And, sure enough, on reaching my domicile, I found installed on the doorstep a most uncouth and villainous-looking tramp.
10Byron could hear himself speaking: 'But spent his days in riot most uncouth, and vexed with mirth the drowsy ear of night.
11They have a dance and a song appropriated to this awful occasion, which consist of the wildest and most uncouth noises and gestures.
12It described in the simplest (and often the most uncouth) words that Nature-ecstasy which the Romanies seem to feel in the woodlands.
13We walked about three quarters of a mile, and that not towards the open, but the most uncouth and unfrequented part of the forest.
14The King's brother was so enraptured, that he capered about with excess of joy, making the most uncouth gestures in accordance with the music.
15Its church is a most uncouth edifice: the plan is unusual; the entrance is in the north transept, which ends in a square high tower.
16"He was the most uncouth looking young man I ever saw." But Lincoln grew on him.
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Most uncouth a través del tiempo
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