|

rustic

When you think of the word rustic, think of the rural country. This word can be given a positive or a negative spin depending on how you use it; a rustic inn, for example, might be quaint or it might be virtually uninhabitable.

The words rustic and "rural" spring from the same ancient root: *rur-, which means "open space" in the hypothetical ancestor language Proto-Indo-European. In early usage, these two words were used interchangeably, but now, rural is used to describe locations –- "rural community," "rural location" — while rustic refers to the unrefined qualities associated with country life. The best antonym is cosmopolitan, which implies the sophistication and worldliness of city life.

DEFINITIONS OF: rustic

1

adj characteristic of rural life

rustic awkwardness”
Synonyms:
countrified, countryfied
rural
living in or characteristic of farming or country life

adj characteristic of the fields or country

rustic stone walls”
Synonyms:
agrestic
rural
living in or characteristic of farming or country life

adj awkwardly simple and provincial

rustic farmers”
Synonyms:
bumpkinly, hick, unsophisticated
provincial
characteristic of the provinces or their people

n an unsophisticated country person

Examples:
Philemon
(Greek mythology) a simple countryman who offered hospitality to Zeus and Hermes when they came to earth without revealing their identities in order to test people's piety
Types:
show 10 types...
hide 10 types...
coon
an eccentric or undignified rustic
countryman, ruralist
a man who lives in the country and has country ways
countrywoman
a woman who lives in the country and has country ways
bushwhacker, hillbilly
a disparaging term for an unsophisticated person
bucolic, peasant, provincial
a country person
cracker, redneck
a poor White person in the southern United States
woodman, woodsman
someone who lives in the woods
bumpkin, chawbacon, hayseed, hick, rube, yahoo, yokel
a person who is not very intelligent or interested in culture
cottar, cotter
a peasant farmer in the Scottish Highlands
moujik, mujik, muzhik, muzjik
a Russian peasant (especially prior to 1917)
Type of:
common man, common person, commoner
a person who holds no title
WORD FAMILY
USAGE EXAMPLES