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Definition of Dirty-minded
1. Adjective. Having lewd thoughts.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dirty-minded
Literary usage of Dirty-minded
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1883)
"A dirty-minded, scurrilous, blasphemous, witty, broadly humorous, and extravagantly
grotesque clerical buffoon. Cion work of Art)—burn his odoriferous ..."
2. Cyclopædia of Wit and Humor by Wayne E. Burton (1868)
"... the dirty- minded gentleman upon whom he had so lately put an extinguisher.
The club-room was full, everybody happy, the ale brisk as a bee—the waiters ..."
3. The Secret History of the Oxford Movement by Walter Walsh (1899)
"6s, and my critic asserts that " None but a dirty-minded man, bent on misusing
the book, would buy it at such a price." Evidently the desire is to produce ..."
4. The Squatter and the Don: A Novel Descriptive of Contemporary Occurrences in by María Amparo Ruiz de Burton (1885)
""And Roper is a dirty-minded dog to say that, and I'll make him eat his dirty
words, or I'll take his hide off of his filthy carcass," Everett said, ..."
5. Contemporary Portraits by Frank Harris (1915)
"But Heine was dirty-minded." "He was a Socialist and singer," I cried, "modern
and irreverent to his finger-tips; a brave soldier in the Liberation War of ..."
6. Full Up and Fed Up: The Worker's Mind in Crowded Britainby Whiting Williams by Whiting Williams (1921)
"... but I'm not dirty-minded " A saloon or "pub" in London's East End as
a "neighborhood 94 centre " to which the babe in arms is becoming accustomed early ..."