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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

uncouth

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 17 April 2025

⏱️ 2 minutes

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Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 17, 2025 is:

uncouth • \un-KOOTH\  • adjective

Uncouth describes things, such as language or behavior, that are impolite or socially unacceptable. A person may also be described as uncouth if they are behaving in a rude way.

// Stacy realized it would be uncouth to show up to the party without a gift, so she picked up a bottle of wine on the way.

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Examples:

“Perhaps people deride those who buy books solely for how they look because it reminds them that despite their primary love of literature, they still appreciate a beautiful cover. It’s not of primary importance but liking how something looks in your home matters to some extent, even if it feels uncouth to acknowledge.” — Chiara Dello Joio, LitHub.com, 24 Jan. 2023

Did you know?

Old English speakers used the word cūth to describe things that were familiar to them, and uncūth for the strange and mysterious. These words passed through Middle English into modern English with different spellings but the same meanings. While couth eventually dropped out of use, uncouth soldiered on. In Captain Singleton by English novelist Daniel Defoe, for example, the author refers to “a strange noise more uncouth than any they had ever heard,” while Shakespeare wrote of an “uncouth forest” in As You Like It. This “unfamiliar” sense of uncouth, however, joined couth in becoming, well, unfamiliar to most English users, giving way to the now-common meanings, “rude” and “lacking polish or grace.” The adjective couth in use today, meaning “sophisticated” or “polished,” arose at the turn of the 20th century, not from the earlier couth, but as a back-formation of uncouth, joining the ranks of other “uncommon opposites” such as kempt and gruntled.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's the Word of the Day for April 17th.

0:07.0

Today's word is uncouth, spelled Uncou-T-H. Uncuth is an adjective. It describes things such as

0:20.0

language or behavior that are impolite or socially

0:22.6

unacceptable. A person may also be described as uncouth if they are behaving in a rude way.

0:29.0

Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com. Perhaps people deride those who buy books solely

0:35.3

for how they look because it reminds them that despite their

0:38.6

primary love of literature, they still appreciate a beautiful cover. It's not of primary importance,

0:44.4

but liking how something looks in your home matters to some extent, even if it feels uncouth

0:49.2

to acknowledge. Old English speakers used the word cuth to describe things that were familiar to them,

0:57.0

and uncouth for the strange and mysterious.

1:00.1

These words passed through Middle English into modern English with different spellings,

1:04.1

but the same meanings.

1:05.8

While Cuth eventually dropped out of use, uncouth soldiered on.

1:09.8

In Captain Singleton, by novelist Daniel

1:12.8

Defoe, for example, the author refers to a strange noise more uncouth than any they had ever

1:20.0

heard, while Shakespeare wrote of an uncouth forest in As You Like It. This unfamiliar

1:26.2

sense of uncouth, however, joined cooth in becoming, well,

1:29.7

unfamiliar to most English users, giving way to the now common meanings, rude, or lacking, polish,

1:37.0

or grace. The adjective cooth in use today, meaning sophisticated or polished, arose at the turn

1:43.1

of the 20th century, not from the earlier

1:45.5

kuth, but as a back formation of uncouth, joining the ranks of other uncommon opposites,

1:51.4

such as Kempt and Gruntled. With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sakalowski.

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