obscene

[uh b-seen] /əbˈsin/
adjective
1.
offensive to morality or decency; indecent; depraved:
obscene language.
2.
causing uncontrolled sexual desire.
3.
abominable; disgusting; repulsive.
Origin
1585-95; < Latin obscēnus, obscaenus
Related forms
obscenely, adverb
obsceneness, noun
unobscene, adjective
unobscenely, adverb
unobsceneness, noun
Can be confused
Examples from the web for obscene
  • She was literally deluged with obscene telephone calls.
  • They were too horrible and obscene even for hardened veterans.
  • Of course, some of her observations were too obscene to be published.
  • The apricots that remained in the branches had grown obscene: they'd swollen to a violent red and their fuzz stood on end.
  • The bankers and big governments will not make obscene amounts of cash if its proven to be a hoax.
  • Bashing an elderly nun under an obscene label does not seem to be a particularly brave or stylish thing to do.
  • There were constant charges that she exploited her position with obscene displays of greed.
  • It is an area of quiet mud-walled villages and irrigated orchards and busy little markets and sudden, obscene acts of violence.
  • There was something creepy, almost obscene, about selling a celebrity's personal belongings to strangers.
  • Those cattle they round up have become politically incorrect: for many, meat is an obscene cuisine.
British Dictionary definitions for obscene

obscene

/əbˈsiːn/
adjective
1.
offensive or outrageous to accepted standards of decency or modesty
2.
(law) (of publications) having a tendency to deprave or corrupt
3.
disgusting; repellent: an obscene massacre
Derived Forms
obscenely, adverb
Word Origin
C16: from Latin obscēnus inauspicious, perhaps related to caenum filth
Word Origin and History for obscene
adj.

1590s, "offensive to the senses, or to taste and refinement," from Middle French obscène (16c.), from Latin obscenus "offensive," especially to modesty, originally "boding ill, inauspicious," of unknown origin; perhaps from ob "onto" (see ob-) + caenum "filth." Meaning "offensive to modesty or decency" is attested from 1590s. Legally, in U.S., it hinged on "whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest." [Justice William Brennan, "Roth v. United States," June 24, 1957]; refined in 1973 by "Miller v. California":

The basic guidelines for the trier of fact must be: (a) whether 'the average person, applying contemporary community standards' would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest, (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
Related: Obscenely.