Uncouth vs Obstreperous - What's the difference?
uncouth | obstreperous |
(archaic) Unfamiliar, strange, foreign.
* 1819 : , The Sketch Book (The Voyage)
Clumsy, awkward.
Unrefined, crude.
*
Attended by, or making, a loud and tumultuous noise; boisterous.
* 1809 , , Knickerbocker's History of New York , ch. 7:
* 1855 , , "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came":
* 1918 , , On the Stairs , ch. 3:
Stubbornly defiant; disobedient; resistant to authority or control, whether in a noisy manner or not.
* 1827 , , The Journal of Sir Walter Scott , October 1827:
* 1903 , , "A Sandshore Wooing" in Short Stories: 1902-1903 :
* 1915 , , The Gray Dawn , ch. 70:
As adjectives the difference between uncouth and obstreperous
is that uncouth is (archaic) unfamiliar, strange, foreign while obstreperous is attended by, or making, a loud and tumultuous noise; boisterous.uncouth
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- There was a delicious sensation of mingled security and awe with which I looked down, from my giddy height, on the monsters of the deep at their uncouth gambols.
Synonyms
*Derived terms
* uncouthnessobstreperous
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- [O]n a clear still summer evening you may hear from the battery of New York the obstreperous peals of broad-mouthed laughter of the Dutch negroes at Communipaw.
- . . . my hope
- Dwindled into a ghost not fit to cope
- With that obstreperous joy success would bring
- He developed an obstreperous baritone . . . and he made himself rather preponderant, whether he happened to know the song or not.
- [W]e came to Whittingham. Thence to Newcastle, where an obstreperous horse retarded us for an hour at least.
- My dress was draggled, my hat had slipped back, and the kinks and curls of my obstreperous hair were something awful.
- They reviled the committee collectively and singly; bragged that they would shoot Coleman, Truett, Durkee, and some others at sight; flourished weapons, and otherwise became so publicly and noisily obstreperous that the committee decided they needed a lesson.