KJV Dictionary Definition: rude
rude
RUDE, a. L. rudis. The sense is probably rough, broken, and this word may be allied to raw and crude.
1. rough; uneven; rugged; unformed by art; as rude workmanship, that is, roughly finished; rude and unpolished stones.
2. Rough; of coarse manners; unpolished; uncivil; clownish; rustic; as a rude countryman; rude behavior; rude treatment; a rude attack.
Ruffian, let go that rude uncivil touch.
3. Violent; tumultuous; boisterous; turbulent; as rude winds; the rude agitation of the sea.
4. violent; fierce; impetuous; as the rude shock of armies.
5. Harsh; inclement; as the rude winter.
6. Ignorant; untaught; savage; barbarous; as the rude natives of America or of New Holland; the rude ancestors of the Greeks.
7. Raw; untaught; ignorant; not skilled or practiced; as rude in speech; rude in arms.
8. Artless; inelegant; not polished; as a rude translation of Virgil.
rudely
RU'DELY, adv.
1. With roughness; as a mountain rudely formed.
2. Violently; fiercely; tumultuously. The door was rudely assaulted.
3. In a rude or uncivil manner; as, to be rudely accosted.
4. Without exactness or nicety; coarsely; as work rudely executed.
I that am rudely stamp'd, and want love's majesty to strut before a wanton ambling nymph.
5. Unskillfully.
My muse, though rudely, has resign'd some faint resemblance of his godlike mind.
6. Without elegance.
rudeness
RU'DENESS, n.
1. A rough broken state; unevenness; wildness; as the rudeness of a mountain, country or landscape.
2. Coarseness of manners; incivility; rusticity; vulgarity.
And kings the rudeness of their joy must bear.
3. Ignorance; unskillfulness.
What he did amiss was rather through rudeness and want of judgment -
4. Artlessness; coarseness; inelegance; as the rudeness of a painting or piece of sculpture.
5. Violence; impetuosity; as the rudeness of an attack or shock.
6. Violence; storminess; as the rudeness of winds or of the season.