Vulgar vs Currish - What's the difference?
vulgar | currish | Related terms |
Debased, uncouth, distasteful, obscene.
* {{quote-book
, year= 1551
, year_published= 1888
, author=
, by=
, title= A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles: Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by the Philological Society.
, url= http://books.google.com/books?id=JmpXAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA217
, original=
, chapter=
, section= Part 1
, isbn=
, edition=
, publisher= Clarendon Press
, location= Oxford
, editor=
, volume= 1
, page= 217
, passage= Also the rule of false position, with dyuers examples not onely vulgar , but some appertaynyng to the rule of Algeber.
}}
* The construction worker made a vulgar suggestion to the girls walking down the street.
(classical sense) Having to do with ordinary, common people.
* Bishop Fell
* Bancroft
* 1860 , G. Syffarth, "A Remarkable Seal in Dr. Abbott's Museum at New York", Transactions of the Academy of Science of St. Louis? , age 265
Pertaining to a cur or mongrel.
Ignoble, mean-spirited.
* 1590 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , II.4:
*, II.1.3:
*:God's vengeance, and all the plagues of Egypt come not upon us, since we are so currish one towards another, so respectless of God and our neighbours, and by our crying sins pull these miseries upon our own heads.
As adjectives the difference between vulgar and currish
is that vulgar is debased, uncouth, distasteful, obscene while currish is pertaining to a cur or mongrel.vulgar
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- It might be more useful to the English reader to write in our vulgar language.
- The mechanical process of multiplying books had brought the New Testament in the vulgar tongue within the reach of every class.
- Further, the same sacred name in other monuments precedes the vulgar name of King Takellothis , the sixth of the XXII. Dyn., as we have seen.
Synonyms
* (obscene) inappropriate, obscene, debased, uncouth, offensive, ignoble, mean, profane * (ordinary) common, ordinary, popularDerived terms
* (obscene) vulgarity * (ordinary) vulgar fraction, vulgate, Vulgate * vulgar fractioncurrish
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- more enfierced through his currish play, / Him sternely grypt, and haling to and fro, / To ouerthrow him strongly did assay […].
