Lacking refinement or cultivation or taste.
Of stone or timber; shaped roughly without finishing.
Sinónimos
Examples for "common"
Examples for "common"
1Bankers believe swing days could become increasingly common given uncertain market conditions.
2This issue is common when studying several health problems in developing countries.
3He said a common sense approach to the Covid-19 situation was needed.
4She said the bylaw takes a common sense approach to the problem.
5But EU rules require border checks with countries outside the common market.
1In appearance it resembles coarse tapioca, and it has no particular flavour.
2The produce in coarse sugar has been more than eight per cent.
3Coat the outside with olive oil and sprinkle with coarse sea salt.
4The lines between the words represent the coarse column-rules of the margins.
5The hands that blindfolded me in the forest were coarse and rough.
1The most vulgar-minded genius that ever produced a great effect in literature.
2As for the vulgar phrase, it is of far more recent origin.
3The furniture of the room is in rich, rather vulgar Oriental taste.
4Some men aim at an aristocratic hand; some deal in vulgar flourishes.
5The general heads of law on that subject are vulgar and trivial.
1This uncouth boy was the son she had put her faith in.
2Press the spikes into the lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh.
3In contrast to his sisters, the Portarlington boys were noisy and uncouth.
4The stupid face, the ignorant mind, the uncouth speech, the vulgar manners.
5Even from the lips of this uncouth woman the truth struck hard.
1In her rough-cut features there was an element of lurking malevolence.
2A stack of rough-cut lumber toppled, spilled across the dusty ground.
3The smell was of dust and dry grass, gasoline and heat-cured, rough-cut wood.
4The cottage came in view, and a bright light streamed through the rough-cut window.
5Arches in brickwork may be classed under three heads: plain arches, rough-cut and gauged.
6We passed alongside the city wall, rough-cut stone with torches flaring in their sockets.
7Though the room was a simple cone of rough-cut rock, its magic was manifest.
8The room beyond is spacious, floored in rough-cut timber, and walled in glass-fronted cabinets.
9Nish examined the paper, which was rough-cut on three sides, razor smooth on the fourth.
10I saw a rough-cut and thought it was sensational.
11He stood there, gripping the bamboo rail, while Vinnevra and I climbed the rough-cut steps.
12In fact, even that last image took some coaxing; during rough-cut screenings she was more tentative.
13That rough-cut teenage warrior is virtually unrecognisable today.
14She put it gingerly on a rough-cut board.
15The canal wall was vertical but the stonework was ancient and rough-cut; I tried to scale it.
16The currency was rough-cut and crudely printed.