There are gradations in awkwardness and vulgarism, as there are in everything else.
2
Why,' said the prof, 'to employ a vulgarism, perspicuity is my penultimate appellative.'
3
You are not-ifI may be permitted an expressive vulgarism-inthe same street with them.
4
Punning is a vulgarism that should be scrupulously avoided.
5
No, in good truth: who can like such vulgarism!
6
This "fetches" the parents (if I may be allowed a vulgarism) more than anything.
7
Think of the vulgarism "flare up;" let it be "burns."
8
Mrs. Verne was almost beside herself (to use a vulgarism).
9
Outside, on a bus shelter, was the Serbian cross, and a vulgarism denouncing the Catholic Church.
10
You are," he confided, "if you will permit the vulgarism, completely off your head."
11
Obstruent-reliable-particularization-fabulosity-different to-averse to-did one ever come across such a mixture of antique pedantry and modern vulgarism!
12
The Asiatic vulgarism of Hortensius thus dislodged classicism from the Roman platform and partly also from literature.
13
A woman who would scorn the vulgarism of jealousy, and yet know what it is to love.
14
I replied with a quaint vulgarism, wheeled my black and raced back the way I had come.
15
Did you ever hear such a vulgarism!
16
The countess, whose return you seem so much to dread, has entertained the town with an excellent vulgarism.