invulgar
English
Etymology
in- + vulgar
Adjective
invulgar (comparative more invulgar, superlative most invulgar)
- (obsolete) Not vulgar; refined; elegant.
- 1604, Michael Drayton, Moses in a Map of his Miracles
- the sad parents this lost Infant ow'd,
Were as invulgar as their fruit was fair
- the sad parents this lost Infant ow'd,
- 1604, Michael Drayton, Moses in a Map of his Miracles
References
invulgar in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
Portuguese
Etymology
From in- + vulgar.
Adjective
invulgar m or f (plural invulgares)
- uncommon