Antonyms for bawdy


Grammar : Adj
Spell : baw-dee
Phonetic Transcription : ˈbɔ di


Definition of bawdy

Origin :
  • late 14c., "soiled, dirty, filthy," from bawd + -y (2). Meaning "lewd" is from 1510s, from notion of "pertaining to or befitting a bawd;" usually of language (originally to talk bawdy).
  • Bawdy Basket, the twenty-third rank of canters, who carry pins, tape, ballads and obscene books to sell. [Grose, "Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue," 1785]
  • Related: Bawdily; bawdiness.
  • adj vulgar, dirty
Example sentences :
  • His mirth is bawdy jests with the wenches, and, behind the door, bawdy earnest.
  • Extract from : « Microcosmography » by John Earle
  • As he went out, however, the conjurer paid him a most bawdy compliment.
  • Extract from : « La Ronge Journal, 1823 » by George Nelson
  • I will sing a bawdy song, sir, because your verjuice face is melancholy, to make liquor go down glib.
  • Extract from : « The Mermaid Series. Edited by H. Ellis. The best plays of the old dramatists. Thomas Dekker. Edited, with an introduction and notes by Ernest Rhys. » by Thomas Dekker
  • I am sick of chattering, playing dice, going to bawdy houses, and making vain reports to the Florentine Wool-staplers.
  • Extract from : « The Romance of Leonardo da Vinci » by Dmitry Sergeyevich Merezhkovsky
  • So one laughed, and the other cried fie: the third said I was a bawdy captain; and there was all I could get of them.
  • Extract from : « A Select Collection of Old English Plays (11 of 15) » by W. Carew Hazlitt
  • After all, Ambrose, scarcely a step closer, could recall clearly every word of the bawdy tales!
  • Extract from : « G-r-r-r...! » by Roger Arcot
  • By my troth, Ill go with thee to the lanes end: if bawdy talk offend you, well have very little of it.
  • Extract from : « Measure for Measure » by William Shakespeare
  • A more likely cause is the second story in the Letter, the visit to the bawdy house.
  • Extract from : « A Letter from Mr. Cibber to Mr. Pope » by Colley Cibber
  • In wine shops and gambling hells and bawdy houses—that's where they live!
  • Extract from : « The Bath Keepers, v.2 (Novels of Paul de Kock Volume VIII) » by Charles Paul de Kock
  • That a saloon with a sign reading "Family Entrance" on its side door invariably has a bawdy house upstairs.
  • Extract from : « The American Credo » by George Jean Nathan

Synonyms for bawdy

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019