English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French impudique. Equivalent to im- +‎ pudic.

Adjective edit

impudic (comparative more impudic, superlative most impudic)

  1. (non-native speakers' English) Immodest.
    • 2000 November 14, Eleonore Beaudoin, “HOPE!!! Harrisson Ford is single again!!! Heheh!:)”, in alt.support.loneliness[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-16:
      Oh, won't you hide those impudic thighs????????
    • 2002 May 29, Jeff, “Demandez ! demandez ! (2ème édition)”, in aus.sport.rugby-league[2] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-16:
      Deferring me to the article, I live that there were indeed mushrooms volvaires which well-sure did not fail to be edible. My astonishment was however going to still increase with the reading of the Petit Robert. I discovered that the phallus was not used for only in the form of the "phalloid" adjective to indicate a mortal mushroom. Phallus as such indicates a mushroom to be strictly accurate. Thus I live impudic names of phallus or phalli of dog which indicated mushrooms basidiomycetes of phallic form and with the nauseous odor (stinking, or cadaveric odor I noted).
    • 2003 December 23, meurgues, “France, the culture wars over head scarves”, in rec.travel.europe[3] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-16:
      So you should be allowed to wear a scarf in a school courtyard because of unpleasant weather. But there is no "natural" reason to wear it inside the classrooms or when it can be dangerous (machines) or to refuse to do sport in light clothes, even with a tolerated scarf, because there are boys or other "impudic" girls in a gymnasium or a swimming pool. So, IMO the scarf can't be banned totally when used as a protection or piece of fashion.

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French impudique. Equivalent to in- +‎ pudic.

Adjective edit

impudic m or n (feminine singular impudică, masculine plural impudici, feminine and neuter plural impudice)

  1. unchaste

Declension edit