English edit

Etymology edit

From rude +‎ -ful.

Adjective edit

rudeful (comparative more rudeful, superlative most rudeful)

  1. (rare) Exhibiting, expressing, or full of rudeness; rude
    • 1874, Henry Porter, Robert Wilmot, Henry Noel, The Two Angry Women of Abington - Volume 7 - Page 191:
      And thus in very good time I end my rudeful rhyme.
    • 1899, Greville d'. Arville, Omega Et Alpha, and Other Poems - Page 60:
      He blind to doubters' rudeful stare — He sees Madona, saintly fair.
    • 1993, Ram Mohan Das, Manu, Women in Manu's Philosophy - Page 75:
      A woman loses all her charms when she has an angry look or a rudeful face.
    • 2002, Tony Medina, Quarishi Ali Lansana, Role call:
      After the tragedy of September 11, 2001, it is somewhat comforting to know that we have young women and men who view life in all its rudeful and beautiful complexities and are on the offense to not only solve problems but be themselves the actors in the solutions.

Anagrams edit