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Ill-mannered   /ɪl-mˈænərd/   Listen
adjective
Ill-mannered  adj.  Impolite; rude; displaying socially incorrect behavior.
Synonyms: rude, unmannered, unmannerly.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Ill-mannered" Quotes from Famous Books



... idea how glad I am to see you," I told him. "If you had, you would have been here days ago. Aren't you rather ill-mannered and neglectful, considering that you are responsible ...
— Dawn O'Hara, The Girl Who Laughed • Edna Ferber

... Whitehead was Poet Laureate! Who knows of him now? Gibbon had not written his "Decline and Fall." Junius was the popular writer. Political corruption was scarified in his letters. The upper classes were coarse, drunken, and ill-mannered. Bribery and corruption on the grossest scale were the principal means for getting into Parliament. Mr. Dowdeswell, M.P. for Worcestershire, said to the Commons, "You have turned out a member for impiety ...
— Thrift • Samuel Smiles

... was upon a totally different matter. His voice was slightly aggressive as he said: "That Evesham boy seems to be for ever turning up at the Vicarage now. He's an ill-mannered cub. I wonder ...
— The Bars of Iron • Ethel May Dell

... that we are. And she is very affectionate. The family are trying, certainly; father-in-law not a bad sort, though a little prosy when upon the subject of his domestic troubles, and a little too fond of his glass; mamma-in-law, and those two ugly, ill-mannered sisters, decidedly a nuisance about the palace. Yet what can we do? they are our relations now, and they do not forget to let us know it. Well, well, we had to expect that, and things might have been worse. Anyhow she is not ...
— The Second Thoughts of An Idle Fellow • Jerome K. Jerome

... half-open, too tired to pay longer attention to their games, but, on the whole, considerably more amused than offended with the liberties they took, for they seemed good-natured creatures, and more frolicsome than positively ill-mannered, he became suddenly aware that two of them had stepped forward from the walls, upon which, after the manner of great spiders, most of them preferred sprawling, and now stood in the middle of the floor, at the foot of his majesty's bed, becking, and bowing, and ducking ...
— Adela Cathcart - Volume II • George MacDonald


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