patán
oaf ; redneck ; lout ; churl ; schmuck ; schmo ; boor ; clod ; hick ; hillbilly ; yokel ; country bumpkin ; bumpkin ; hayseed ; oafish.
She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.
His talks sparkle with Southern humor and a distinct voice known to mention rednecks, the evil of institutions, and racial reconciliation.
It is not just yobbos and louts that are guilty of antisocial behaviour.
Then again, who but a churl could fail to grieve at the waste of an artistic life of such immensity and grandeur?.
Schmuck entered English as a borrowed word from Yiddish, where it is an obscene term literally meaning a foreskin or head of a penis, and an insult.
This team of schmoes is capable of anything.
London is a teeming haven of loutish boors whose idea of sophistication is to get drunk and tell bawdy gags.
Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art.
The Wizard, played by Joel Grey, is a smooth-talking dumbbell who admits he is 'a corn-fed hick' and 'one of your dime-a-dozen mediocrities'.
This unique book stands as a testament to the enduring place of the hillbilly in the American imagination.
The prizefighter hit the yokel a hundred times while the yokel held up his arms in stunned surprise.
And she said I wonder how on earth that country bumpkin found his way to town.
Are you such bumpkins that you can't even recognize a French name?.
But, I'm not such a hayseed that I don't know a good thing when I see it.
Naturally, like a good mother, she always reproved us for bad manners, or for being unkind to other children, or selfish, or affected, or oafish, or sulky.