Uncouth in a sentence as an adjective

Jesus, since when has uncouth thoughts been grounds for conviction?

Am I the only one who thinks it kinda uncouth to try to unmark this guy?

Looks like a heavy-handed attempt to maintain their culture - as uncouth as it may be.

How uncouth are the heathens who consume the apple straight from the stem, exposing the unsightly core in plain view.

If his ideas offend you, you should rebut them, rather than making such an uncouth, sweeping value judgement.

But expecting flattery is uncouth, even if you are accustomed to being flattered.

You can condemn this, but it can happen to the best of us. When it does, it's nice to have a group of people whom the occasional uncouth or unthinking comment rolls off their back like water on ducks.

It's time to put away the gibberish about how it's somehow uncouth to think about money as you think about college.

While this is arguably true today for people in poverty, it seems a bit more uncouth to force this for each and every citizen under all conditions.

Only the uneducated, uncouth hicks actually thought about money.

Similarly, by speaking of "wild Indians" it does indeed marginalize a people and shoehorn them into a stereotype of being uncouth individuals.

Basically it's personal branding, and a bit uncouth, but necessary unfortunately.

What does it really signify that you have "done" India or Nigeria or Brazil?These lists always remind me of something else that an uncouth young man might brag about - but a gentleman would never.

Just typing this, laptop keys clicking, fan whirring, electrical timer creaking, crows squawking, the uncouth hollering of neighbors outside, cars rumbling in the distance, I am longing to experience such silence again.

"Basically, anonymity allows people to treat everyone around them as utter foreignersyou don't expect me to have any grounding in your culture, and I don't expect you to have any grounding in mine, so neither of us "needs" to be upset when the other does something that is uncouth.

Uncouth definitions

adjective

lacking refinement or cultivation or taste; "he had coarse manners but a first-rate mind"; "behavior that branded him as common"; "an untutored and uncouth human being"; "an uncouth soldier--a real tough guy"; "appealing to the vulgar taste for violence"; "the vulgar display of the newly rich"

See also: coarse common rough-cut vulgar