bawdiness / ˈbɔ di /

野蛮生长野蛮行为野蛮人野蛮的行为

bawdiness2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective

bawd·i·er, bawd·i·est.

  1. indecent; lewd; obscene: another of his bawdy stories.
n. 名词 noun
  1. coarse or indecent talk or writing; bawdry; bawdiness: a collection of Elizabethan bawdy.

bawdiness 近义词

n. 名词 noun

obscenity

更多bawdiness例句

  1. Starring Dev Patel, The Green Knight is a swashbuckling tale of adventure, to be sure — but it feels dragged out of the mists of time, uncanny spirits and a touch of the rude and bawdy still clinging to the edges.
  2. Warren’s bawdy comedy was tame by the profanity-laced standards of today, but it was considered so outrageous for its time — especially coming from a woman — that she was effectively banned from television and radio.
  3. More than bawdy, though, The Ball adds a familiar unpretentiousness to trendy locales like Tao, Lavo, The Park, and Dream Hotel.
  4. Note the bawdy pun in the first example, by which the speaker implies that she came last night.
  5. Nevertheless, the ARTPOP singer unleashed a decidedly non-corporate show that was equal parts bawdy and bizarre.
  6. Never one to mince her words, Leakes is as bawdy as they get on reality television.
  7. The bawdy jokes that followed may have helped a politician who looks like he was born in a suit.
  8. Four engravings and at least six pamphlets, all focusing on the bawdy house story, were shortly in circulation.
  9. Eight men marched one evening into Llanyglo, bawling a bawdy chorus, with Sam Kerr showing the way.
  10. I ha lost by her squeamishness, more than would have builded twelve bawdy-houses.
  11. "That was Belle Cora, who keeps that bawdy house up town," Nesbitt volunteered.
  12. A riotous twenty years in night saloons and bawdy houses had left him a kindly, choleric, and respected newspaper figure.