Patán in english
Lout
pronunciation: laʊt part of speech: noun
pronunciation: laʊt part of speech: noun
In gestures
patán = oaf ; redneck ; lout ; churl ; schmuck ; schmo ; boor ; clod ; hick ; hillbilly ; yokel ; country bumpkin ; bumpkin ; hayseed ; oafish.
Example: She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.Example: His talks sparkle with Southern humor and a distinct voice known to mention rednecks, the evil of institutions, and racial reconciliation.Example: It is not just yobbos and louts that are guilty of antisocial behaviour.Example: Then again, who but a churl could fail to grieve at the waste of an artistic life of such immensity and grandeur?.Example: Schmuck entered English as a borrowed word from Yiddish, where it is an obscene term literally meaning a foreskin or head of a penis, and an insult.Example: This team of schmoes is capable of anything.Example: London is a teeming haven of loutish boors whose idea of sophistication is to get drunk and tell bawdy gags.Example: Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art.Example: The Wizard, played by Joel Grey, is a smooth-talking dumbbell who admits he is 'a corn-fed hick' and 'one of your dime-a-dozen mediocrities'.Example: This unique book stands as a testament to the enduring place of the hillbilly in the American imagination.Example: The prizefighter hit the yokel a hundred times while the yokel held up his arms in stunned surprise.Example: And she said I wonder how on earth that country bumpkin found his way to town.Example: Are you such bumpkins that you can't even recognize a French name?.Example: But, I'm not such a hayseed that I don't know a good thing when I see it.Example: Naturally, like a good mother, she always reproved us for bad manners, or for being unkind to other children, or selfish, or affected, or oafish, or sulky.