What does vulgair in Dutch mean?
What is the meaning of the word vulgair in Dutch? The article explains the full meaning, pronunciation along with bilingual examples and instructions on how to use vulgair in Dutch.
The word vulgair in Dutch means vulgair, plat, vulgair, ordinair, profaan, vuilgebekt, schuin, schunnig, onfatsoenlijk, vulgair, ordinair, plat, goedkoop, grof, vulgair, ordinair, vulgair, proleet, verlagen. To learn more, please see the details below.
Meaning of the word vulgair
vulgair, plat(language, gesture: obscene) No vulgar language is allowed in the classroom. |
vulgair, ordinair(vulgar, tacky) My mom's gaudy clothes embarrass me. |
profaan(vulgar, offensive) The profane television show is offensive to women. |
vuilgebekt(figurative (using vulgar language) |
schuin, schunnig(coarse, vulgar) |
onfatsoenlijk(too vulgar to be repeated) |
vulgair, ordinair, plat(figurative (base, vulgar) The white establishment regarded jazz as a form of low-class entertainment. |
goedkoop(informal (fiction: cheap, pulpy) Laura always reads trashy novels during her lunch break to escape the monotony of her job. |
grof, vulgair(in a coarse way) Sandy thinks Chuck always eats his food grossly. |
ordinair, vulgair(informal, pejorative (woman: lacking class) Wendy looks trashy in that short skirt and heavy makeup. |
proleet(sb without taste or refinement) (pejoratief) |
verlagen(debase, make sth vulgar) (figuurlijk) |
Let's learn Dutch
So now that you know more about the meaning of vulgair in Dutch, you can learn how to use them through selected examples and how to read them. And remember to learn the related words that we suggest. Our website is constantly updating with new words and new examples so you can look up the meanings of other words you don't know in Dutch.
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Do you know about Dutch
Dutch (Nederlands) is a language of the Western branch of the Germanic languages, spoken daily as a mother tongue by about 23 million people in the European Union — mainly living in the Netherlands and Belgium — and second language of 5 million people. Dutch is one of the languages closely related to German and English and is considered a mixture of the two.