安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- IMPERTINENT Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
impertinent, officious, meddlesome, intrusive, obtrusive mean given to thrusting oneself into the affairs of others impertinent implies exceeding the bounds of propriety in showing interest or curiosity or in offering advice
- IMPERTINENT | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
IMPERTINENT definition: 1 rude and not showing respect, especially towards someone older or in a higher position than you… Learn more
- IMPERTINENT Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
Impertinent definition: intrusive or presumptuous, as persons or their actions; insolently rude; uncivil See examples of IMPERTINENT used in a sentence
- Impertinent - Definition, Meaning Synonyms - Vocabulary. com
If someone's rude without being openly nasty, like a kid in the back row of class quietly heckling his teacher, you can call him impertinent
- IMPERTINENT definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If someone talks or behaves in a rather impolite and disrespectful way, you can say that they are being impertinent
- impertinent adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage . . .
rude and not showing respect for somebody who is older or more important synonym impolite Would it be impertinent to ask why you're leaving? She found the question highly impertinent Some people said he had been disrespectful to the president in his last speech Some people think it is impolite to ask someone’s age
- Impertinent - definition of impertinent by The Free Dictionary
impertinent, from its primary meaning of not pertinent and hence inappropriate or out of place, has come to imply an unseemly intrusion into the affairs of others; it may also refer to a presumptuous rudeness toward persons entitled to respect: impertinent questions; an impertinent interruption
- IMPERTINENT Synonyms: 196 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
Some common synonyms of impertinent are intrusive, meddlesome, obtrusive, and officious While all these words mean "given to thrusting oneself into the affairs of others," impertinent implies exceeding the bounds of propriety in showing interest or curiosity or in offering advice
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