释义 |
foulmouthed in American English (ˈfaʊlˈmaʊðd; ˈfaʊlˈmaʊθt) adjective using obscene, profane, or scurrilous language foulmouthed in American English (ˈfaulˈmauðd, -ˈmauθt) adjectiveusing obscene, profane, or scurrilous language; given to filthy or abusive speech Word origin [1590–1600; foul + mouth + -ed3]This word is first recorded in the period 1590–1600. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: Byzantine, attack, dummy, radius, tea-ed is a suffix forming adjectives from nouns. Other words that use the affix -ed include: bearded, monied, tender-heartedExamples of 'foulmouthed' in a sentencefoulmouthed You say your partner was never foulmouthed or racist before this?All he has to do now is learn to be an egotistical, foulmouthed monster.She was drunk and foulmouthed at the weekend, in front of our son.He has courted controversy in the past for a string of foulmouthed outbursts.His workmen are foulmouthed, but usually reconciled, and finish the task, nerve-rackingly, on deadline.The main target for the foulmouthed 'humour' is the popular 1990s show itself.Funny, gory and foulmouthed, the film starts slowly, but builds to a nail-biting climax.Mild, loving husbands can become violent, foulmouthed, obsessively angry dictators.Supporters claim they heard foulmouthed expletives and physical threats.People are quite smutty and foulmouthed on set.The singer let slip that the four-year-old has started copying her famously foulmouthed ways. |