অসূক্ষ্ম, নিকৃষ্ট, অসভ্য, অশিষ্ট, বুকড়ি, কঙ্কর, মোটা
(1) Of textures that are rough to the touch or substances consisting of relatively large particles.
(2) Lacking refinement or cultivation or taste.
(3) Of low or inferior quality or value.
(4) Of texture.
(5) Large-grained or rough to the touch.
(6) Conspicuously and tastelessly indecent.
(7) Not fine.
(8) Rude.
(9) Rough.
(10) Unrefined.
(1) You will see women lose their uniqueness - they will become as coarse , as brutish as men.
(2) The ogres, unable to see her, began to look around, still roaring and shouting in their coarse speech.
(3) The people whom he met, besides his own kin, were coarse in speech and thought.
(4) At a microscopic scale, at the surface of the deposit, coarse particles roll on a deposit of fine particles as a result of particle segregation.
(5) The material is coarse and rough, the fabric verdant and winter green.
(6) Oats can be used for hay; however, as with the winter cereals, oats are coarse , slow to dry, and often produce dusty hay.
(7) His voice was coarse and scratchy, filled with malice and hunger.
(8) These treasure hunters were coarse and greedy types whose only intention was plunder.
(9) If a drop of the same ink is mixed with a drop of fresh blood, the carbon precipitates at once in the form of rather coarse black particles, assembling in small irregular clusters.
(10) He also needs to know the fineness, because coarse particles don't work.
(11) Or, you could argue that our language has become downright coarse , offensive and rude.
(12) A ragged, yellow-green plant had pushed its way through the coarse , black soil.
(13) Sprinkle the coarse salt over a sheet pan and arrange the clams on top.
(14) Beneath these lies a floor of coarse granite sand and broken shell.
(15) The poet who was so courtly and gentle in his verse could be coarse and vulgar in his everyday speech.
(16) I sighed, moved to stroke the slightly coarse fur on her shoulder.
(17) There are places where the sand is coarse and hard instead of soft, worn by years of the sea and her moods.
(18) Some sift sand from millet, while others pound the grain into a coarse flour.
(19) Water used for domestic purposes can be easily recycled by passing it through layers of charcoal and coarse sand.
(20) The Romans considered the leek a superior vegetable, unlike onions and garlic which were despised as coarse foods for the poor.
rough
large
oafish
vulgar
harsh
uncouth
common
dusty
fine
floury
superfine
Fine
Gentle
Nice
Polite
Refined
Sophisticated
Delicate
Smooth
Soft