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Definitions

inartistic

[in-ahr-tis-tik] / ˌɪn ɑrˈtɪs tɪk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

His swing was an inartistic whir of elbows, shoulders and knees that resulted in a hook.

From Golf Digest • Apr. 1, 2019

Criticize the music’s simplistic emotions, earworm hooks, instant clichés, and crowd-pleasing exhortations as much as you’d like, the movie suggests, but don’t misunderstand it as insincere or inartistic, as selling out or pandering.

From The New Yorker • Nov. 5, 2018

Highlight of the year: Jack Jewsbury's net-seeking missile that produced a stunning though inartistic 1-0 win in Vancouver.

From The Guardian • Dec. 5, 2012

The brothers are widely regarded as inartistic penny-pinchers.

From Time Magazine Archive

Miss Garden—admirable and spontaneous artist though she be—once wrote an article in which she cited Madame Butterfly as an example of the inartistic effects of English librettos.

From Memoirs of an American Prima Donna by Kellogg, Clara Louise