Bawdy Mnemonic
Explore definitions and mnemonics for bawdy.
bawdy
bawdy
/ˈbɔːdi/
Examples
- The Canterbury Tales are bawdy and irreverent.
- A few of the ballads are rather bawdy.
- The performance was considered to be very bawdy.
- Life was often ribald and bawdy too.
- He was a superb raconteur, and a fund of bawdy stories.
- Madonna has a reputation for being ribald and bawdy.
- I thought the description as bawdy was pushing it a bit, myself.
- However, the lampoon simultaneously promoted a species of crass, bawdy comedy.
- Dioneo narrates what is by far the most obscene and bawdy tale in the Decameron.
- He also appreciated her blunt personality and bawdy sense of humor.
lewd or obscene talk or writing
noun
humorously vulgar
adjective
Definition 0 of 0
"Baw + D. Loud D jokes are often inappropriate and obscene."
"Baw + D. A rowdy bird making loud, indecent jokes."
Mnemonic 0 of 0