He's been given a priceless chance to put a positive spin on the events of his life, but still manages to come off as boorish, sexist and vulgar. |
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If this was just a joke on his part then I apologize, but it came off rude and boorish. |
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It makes people serving on public boards look conspiratorial, and it makes people on other boards appear boorish. |
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He clambers over the machinery with the agility of a monkey, hanging at giddy angles to watch Siegfried's latest bit of boorish behaviour. |
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Perhaps you are still wondering who will, as we boorish Yanks say, drop trou in the movie? |
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Also, please do ignore these boorish Yanks who go about their business with flagrant disregard for military decorum and totally without charm. |
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The Merovingian kings were not boorish illiterates, but were able to read and write. |
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Boudu rocks the household to its foundation with boorish behavior and manners befitting a beast. |
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It's possible to view a pirate as boorish and crass or as vivacious and life-loving. |
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When your movement becomes the overdog, such people are boorish and obnoxious. |
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The filmmakers' desire to create an unstuffy, modern version of the Renaissance monarch merely turns him into a boorish, violent plug-ugly. |
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That unfrequented little bay not far from here was our very own private hideout until some low, boorish money makers pushed their way in. |
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She claimed that loutish youths, prying locals and boorish day-trippers were making life intolerable. |
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And when she takes on blokey mannerisms, the result isn't an ugly, boorish ocker, but a smart woman celebrating Australia by parodying it. |
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The hawk-nosed designer narrowed his eyes darkly at the boorish interruption. |
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He was said to be boorish and unmannerly and argumentative and moody and addicted to reading, of all things. |
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Wittgenstein is acting in his usual grotesquely arrogant self-opinionated, rude and boorish manner. |
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Two self-aggrandizers with a penchant for intolerance and boorish behavior. |
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Octopus is one of those sleazy and boorish Americans whose instincts prove correct. |
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The commercial culture will tolerate multiple divorces, trips to rehab, and all sorts of boorish behavior. |
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We would likely find such an observation to be boorish, insensitive, and unperceptive. |
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Unfortunately, this success seems to have come at a price, with certain sections of the crowd indulging in boorish, jeering and in some cases lewd behaviour. |
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While my attitude can appear boorish and ungracious, in reality, of course, I am thankful for the opportunities that Canada has given me. |
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Even by his shaky standards, Erdoğan's behaviour during the campaign was exceptionally boorish. |
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To some these faults may have portray him as some rebellious humourist, but to most his behaviour is merely boorish. |
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Is that not an unbelievably boorish way to behave toward the French language? |
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Though considered boorish by many in his homeland, Maradona came to embody the essence of being Argentinian. |
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The great freedom of the Buddhist mystic is not freedom to be boorish and immoral for his own convenience and comfort. |
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Costa was to prove himself equally boorish when, ten minutes into the second-half, he headbutted Martins Indi, a Dutch midfielder. |
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He was vain, egotistical, boorish and gloriously insensitive. |
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Dropping into chairs, they will sit pufling away and trying to gorgonize the President with their silent stares, until their boorish curiosity is fully satisfied. |
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Consequently, he was booed every time he touched the ball by the boorish, and unforgiving, Brazilians in the crowd. |
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So you will appreciate I have a right and a duty to speak out when I witness boorish and loutish behaviour on the streets of Sligo, from whatever quarter it comes. |
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She seems banal and unreasonably submissive to her boorish husband. |
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Once again a boorish minority, high on drugs or drink, is to blame. |
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They tend to be illiberal, boorish, uncultured, arrogant snobs. |
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May Week.... As in every year, that infamous week was dragging its boorish heels with remarkable infestivity. |
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It was not at all uncommon for the aristocracy of England and the Continent to be effusively polite among themselves and brutally boorish to those they considered their inferiors. |
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I also wish to express here the anger of the media and of the world of journalism about the arbitrary and boorish conduct of the Turkish occupying forces and of the occupying regime towards media workers. |
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However, we did not think that the Conservatives would demonstrate such boorish logic, such a Neanderthal attitude, to the point of threatening cultural development. |
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Too often, standup is reactionary, laddish and boorish. |
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These are rather general, rather violent, and rather boorish opinions. |
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For 17 years General Pinochet ruled over a police state. He was uncouth and boorish, prone to banging the table with his revolver at junta meetings. |
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The sports papers, the equivalent of our tabloids, splashed his boorish performance at the press conference on Thursday with pictures of him wearing his Walkman while supposedly answering questions. |
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No matter its final shape, Ukraine will be left with boorish new neighbours on its eastern flank. Directly west of Donetsk, the Dnipropetrovsk region is preparing for more trouble, including banditry, kidnapping and terror. |
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I don't suppose it's remotely possible that you are boorish and dickly, is it? |
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Licensed by terminal illness, Jo spends much of her time ridiculing the guests, including an ill-matched married couple and a boorish bigot named Fred. |
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Only his music friend Elisabeth von Herzogenberg has the heart to admonish him for his boorish behavior at times, also because he finds nothing good to say about her husband's music. |
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Having heard that beautiful Ealdgyth had married that very morning this boorish Skallagrim, Godwyn decides to invoque his right of Primae Noctis and takes the young bride in his castle. |
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It still seems to be the case that, when big debates are taking place on the role and position of women in political life, boorish behaviour very often still gets the better of courteousness. |
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Taken at his own word, William Hogarth could be assumed to be as zealous and boorish a Francophobe as any modern-day editorialist in the British popular press. |
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Drinking on an empty stomach was regarded as boorish and a sure sign for alcoholism, the debilitating physical and psychological effects of which were known to the Romans. |
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