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Ruffianly   Listen
Ruffianly

adjective
1.
Violent and lawless.  Synonym: tough.  "Tough street gangs"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Ruffianly" Quotes from Famous Books



... absolutely ruffianly. His head was knotted in a red, white-spotted handkerchief; his grizzled beard was tangled; he wore a black and rusty cloak, ragged at the edges, and his feet were often bare; at his side would lie his wooden right hand. As a rule, the place of his forearm was taken by a long, thin, steel ...
— Romance • Joseph Conrad and F.M. Hueffer

... that the proceedings of the American Congress, while in the main conducted with becoming propriety and decorum, have occasionally been dishonored by angry personal altercations and scenes of ruffianly violence. These disorders increased as the great political struggle over the slavery question grew in intensity, and reached their culmination in a series of ...
— Abraham Lincoln, A History, Volume 2 • John George Nicolay and John Hay

... against long natural hair,—the "disguisement of long ruffianly hair,"—as did also President Chauncey of Harvard College; while Mr. Wigglesworth's sermon on the subject has often been reprinted, and is full of logical arguments. This offence was named on the list of existing evils which was made by the General Court: that "the men wore long hair like ...
— Sabbath in Puritan New England • Alice Morse Earle

... half turned his head, sheered a little in the direction of the voice, and landed stiffly on the sand-bar below the bridge. Then you saw what a ruffianly brute he really was. His back view was immensely respectable, for he stood nearly six feet high, and looked rather like a very proper bald-headed parson. In front it was different, for his Ally Sloper-like head and neck had not a feather to them, and there ...
— The Second Jungle Book • Rudyard Kipling

... Madame takes it into her head to toddle along up here to-night and calls your bluff and summons the gentle Hans or Fritz or whatever that ruffianly waiter's name is to come upstairs and settle your hash! What sort of a fight are you going to put up in that narrow corridor out there with a Hun next door and probably on every side of you, and no ...
— The Man with the Clubfoot • Valentine Williams


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