rough

[ruhf] /rʌf/
adjective, rougher, roughest.
1.
having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth:
rough, red hands; a rough road.
2.
shaggy or coarse:
a dog with a rough coat.
3.
(of an uninhabited region or large land area) steep or uneven and covered with high grass, brush, trees, stones, etc.:
to hunt over rough country.
4.
acting with or characterized by violence:
Boxing is a rough sport.
5.
characterized by unnecessary violence or infractions of the rules:
It was a rough prize fight.
6.
violently disturbed or agitated; turbulent, as water or the air:
a rough sea.
7.
having a violently irregular motion; uncomfortably or dangerously uneven:
The plane had a rough flight in the storm.
8.
stormy or tempestuous, as wind or weather.
9.
sharp or harsh:
a rough temper.
10.
unmannerly or rude:
his rough and churlish manner; They exchanged rough words.
11.
disorderly or riotous:
a rough mob.
12.
difficult or unpleasant:
to have a rough time of it.
13.
harsh to the ear; grating or jarring, as sounds.
14.
harsh to the taste; sharp or astringent:
a rough wine.
15.
coarse, as food.
16.
lacking culture or refinement:
a rough, countrified manner.
17.
without refinements, luxuries, or ordinary comforts or conveniences:
rough camping.
18.
requiring exertion or strength rather than intelligence or skill:
rough manual labor.
19.
not elaborated, perfected, or corrected; unpolished, as language, verse, or style:
a rough draft.
20.
made or done without any attempt at exactness, completeness, or thoroughness; approximate or tentative:
a rough guess.
21.
crude, unwrought, nonprocessed, or unprepared:
rough rice.
22.
Phonetics. uttered with aspiration; having the sound of h; aspirated.
noun
23.
something that is rough, especially rough ground.
24.
Golf. any part of the course bordering the fairway on which the grass, weeds, etc., are not trimmed.
25.
the unpleasant or difficult part of anything.
26.
anything in its crude or preliminary form, as a drawing.
27.
Chiefly British. a rowdy; ruffian.
adverb
28.
in a rough manner; roughly.
verb (used with object), roughed, roughing.
29.
to make rough; roughen.
30.
to give a beating to, manhandle, or subject to physical violence (often followed by up):
The mob roughed up the speaker.
31.
to subject to some rough, preliminary process of working or preparation (often followed by down, off, or out):
to rough off boards.
32.
to sketch roughly or in outline (often followed by in or out):
to rough out a diagram; to rough in the conversation of a novel.
33.
Sports. to subject (a player on the opposing team) to unnecessary physical abuse, as in blocking or tackling:
The team was penalized 15 yards for roughing the kicker.
verb (used without object), roughed, roughing.
34.
to become rough, as a surface.
35.
to behave roughly.
Idioms
36.
in the rough, in a rough, crude, or unfinished state:
The country has an exciting potential, but civilization there is still in the rough.
37.
rough it, to live without the customary comforts or conveniences; endure rugged conditions:
We really roughed it on our fishing trip.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English (adj. and noun); Old English rūh (adj.); cognate with Dutch ruig, German rauh
Related forms
roughly, adverb
roughness, noun
overrough, adjective
overroughly, adverb
overroughness, noun
Can be confused
rough, ruff.
Synonyms
1. irregular, jagged, bumpy, craggy. 2. hairy, bristly. 13. noisy, cacophonous, raucous. 16. impolite, uncivil, unpolished, rude.
Antonyms
1. smooth, even, regular.
British Dictionary definitions for rough out

rough out

verb (transitive, adverb)
1.
See rough (sense 33)
2.
(engineering) to machine (a workpiece, such as a casting or forging) with heavy cuts leaving a rough surface to be finished

rough

/rʌf/
adjective
1.
(of a surface) not smooth; uneven or irregular
2.
(of ground) covered with scrub, boulders, etc
3.
denoting or taking place on uncultivated ground: rough grazing, rough shooting
4.
shaggy or hairy
5.
turbulent; agitated: a rough sea
6.
(of the performance or motion of something) uneven; irregular: a rough engine
7.
(of behaviour or character) rude, coarse, ill mannered, inconsiderate, or violent
8.
harsh or sharp: rough words
9.
(informal) severe or unpleasant: a rough lesson
10.
(of work, a task, etc) requiring physical rather than mental effort
11.
(informal) ill or physically upset: he felt rough after an evening of heavy drinking
12.
unfair or unjust: rough luck
13.
harsh or grating to the ear
14.
harsh to the taste
15.
without refinement, luxury, etc
16.
not polished or perfected in any detail; rudimentary; not elaborate: rough workmanship, rough justice
17.
not prepared or dressed: rough gemstones
18.
(of a guess, estimate, etc) approximate
19.
(Austral, informal) (of a chance) not good
20.
having the sound of h; aspirated
21.
(informal, mainly Brit) rough on
  1. severe towards
  2. unfortunate for (a person)
22.
the rough side of one's tongue, harsh words; a reprimand, rebuke, or verbal attack
noun
23.
rough ground
24.
a sketch or preliminary piece of artwork
25.
an unfinished or crude state (esp in the phrase in the rough)
26.
(golf) the rough, the part of the course bordering the fairways where the grass is untrimmed
27.
(tennis, squash, badminton) the side of a racket on which the binding strings form an uneven line
28.
(informal) a rough or violent person; thug
29.
the unpleasant side of something (esp in the phrase take the rough with the smooth)
adverb
30.
in a rough manner; roughly
31.
sleep rough, to spend the night in the open; be without a home or without shelter
verb
32.
(transitive) to make rough; roughen
33.
(transitive; foll by out, in, etc) to prepare (a sketch, report, piece of work, etc) in preliminary form
34.
(informal) rough it, to live without the usual comforts or conveniences of life
See also rough out, rough up
Derived Forms
roughness, noun
Word Origin
Old English rūh; related to Old Norse ruksa, Middle Dutch rūge, rūwe, German rauh
Word Origin and History for rough out

rough

adj.

Old English ruh "rough, coarse (of cloth); hairy, shaggy; untrimmed, uncultivated," from West Germanic *rukhwaz "shaggy, hairy, rough" (cf. Middle Dutch ruuch, Dutch ruig, Old High German ruher, German rauh), from Proto-Germanic *rukhaz, from PIE *reue- "to smash, knock down, tear out, dig up" (cf. Sanskrit ruksah "rough;" Latin ruga "wrinkle," ruere "to rush, fall violently, collapse," ruina "a collapse;" Lithuanian raukas "wrinkle," rukti "to shrink").

The original -gh- sound was guttural, as in Scottish loch. Sense of "approximate" is first recorded c.1600. Of places, "riotous, disorderly, characterized by violent action," 1863. Rough draft is from 1690s. Rough-and-ready is from 1810, originally military; rough-and-tumble (1810) is from a style of free-fighting.

v.

late 15c., from rough (adj.). Related: Roughed; roughing. Phrase rough it "submit to hardships" (1768) is originally nautical:

To lie rough; to lie all night in one's clothes: called also roughing it. Likewise to sleep on the bare deck of a ship, when the person is commonly advised to chuse the softest plank. [Grose, "Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue," 1788]
To rough out "shape or plan approximately" is from 1770. To rough up "make rough" is from 1763. To rough (someone) up "beat up, jostle violently" is from 1868. The U.S. football penalty roughing was originally a term from boxing (1866).

n.

c.1200, "broken ground," from rough (adj.). Meaning "a rowdy" is first attested 1837. Specific sense in golf is from 1901. Phrase in the rough "in an unfinished or unprocessed condition" (of timber, etc.) is from 1819.

Slang definitions & phrases for rough out

rough

adjective
  1. Lewd; salacious; dirty, raunchy: Some of the jokes were pretty rough (1958+)
  2. Difficult; dangerous; tough: Conditions were very rough that winter (1856+)
noun

A used car that has been in a wreck (1950s+ Salespersons)

Related Terms

play for keeps


Idioms and Phrases with rough out

rough out

Also, rough in. Prepare or indicate in unfinished form, as in He roughed out several plans for a merger, or They roughed in where the doors would go without checking with the architect. [ Second half of 1700s ]