Vulgarly


adjective
1.
characterized by ignorance of or lack of good breeding or taste:
vulgar ostentation.
2.
indecent; obscene; lewd:
a vulgar work; a vulgar gesture.
3.
crude; coarse; unrefined:
a vulgar peasant.
4.
of, relating to, or constituting the ordinary people in a society:
the vulgar masses.
5.
current; popular; common:
a vulgar success; vulgar beliefs.
6.
spoken by, or being in the language spoken by, the people generally; vernacular:
vulgar tongue.
7.
lacking in distinction, aesthetic value, or charm; banal; ordinary:
a vulgar painting.
noun
8.
Archaic. the common people.
9.
Obsolete. the vernacular.
adjective
1.
marked by lack of taste, culture, delicacy, manners, etc: vulgar behaviour, vulgar language
2.
(often capital; usually prenominal) denoting a form of a language, esp of Latin, current among common people, esp at a period when the formal language is archaic and not in general spoken use
3.
(archaic)

of, relating to, or current among the great mass of common people, in contrast to the educated, cultured, or privileged; ordinary
(as collective noun; preceded by the): the vulgar

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  • Vulgarness

    adjective 1. characterized by ignorance of or lack of good breeding or taste: vulgar ostentation. 2. indecent; obscene; lewd: a vulgar work; a vulgar gesture. 3. crude; coarse; unrefined: a vulgar peasant. 4. of, relating to, or constituting the ordinary people in a society: the vulgar masses. 5. current; popular; common: a vulgar success; vulgar […]

  • Vulgars

    adjective 1. characterized by ignorance of or lack of good breeding or taste: vulgar ostentation. 2. indecent; obscene; lewd: a vulgar work; a vulgar gesture. 3. crude; coarse; unrefined: a vulgar peasant. 4. of, relating to, or constituting the ordinary people in a society: the vulgar masses. 5. current; popular; common: a vulgar success; vulgar […]

  • Vulgate

    noun 1. the Latin version of the Bible, prepared chiefly by Saint Jerome at the end of the 4th century a.d., and used as the authorized version of the Roman Catholic Church. 2. (lowercase) any commonly recognized text or version of a work. adjective 3. of or relating to the Vulgate. 4. (lowercase) commonly used […]

  • Vulgate bible

    Vulgate Bible [(vul-gayt)] A Latin translation of the Bible made by the scholar Jerome, a saint of the Roman Catholic Church, in the fourth century. This translation was the standard Bible of the Western world until the Reformation. Vulgate comes from a Latin word meaning “common,” because Jerome’s translation used the Latin of everyday speech.

  • Vulgus

    noun, plural vulguses for 2. 1. the common people; masses. 2. an exercise in Latin formerly required of English public-school pupils. ad captandum vulgus [ahd kahp-tahn-doo m woo l-goo s; English ad kap-tan-duh m vuhl-guh s] /ɑd kɑpˈtɑn dʊm ˈwʊl gʊs; English æd kæpˈtæn dəm ˈvʌl gəs/ Latin. 1. in order to please the mob.


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