Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The vessel, called the Vulgarian, greeted them by voice only.
Last year, Spy magazine called him a "vulgarian," among other things.
Martin Luther is dismissed as 'a vulgarian of the first water'.
The coach, the only man in the play, is gradually revealed as a bully and a vulgarian.
The implication was that Ben had moved from a princess to a vulgarian.
In his day, Bernstein was often disparaged as a vulgarian.
A populist he may be, a vulgarian he is not.
You Cashins may look down on me as a money-grubbing vulgarian.
In the current stage musical the two Vulgarian spies had the following dialogue:
This is a showpiece, requiring a more virtuosic vulgarian at the helm.
Back then critics called him a Kitschnik and a New Vulgarian.
At times it seemed as though the whole thing had been an elaborate plot just to annoy the short-fingered vulgarian.
He became noted for his outrageous material, and was later described as "a professional vulgarian, not to be confused with glamour drag."
Apparently Miss Barr cannot quit playing the ultimate vulgarian when she leaves the set and is taken out to the old ball game.
The supposed vulgarian Johnson, on the other hand, comes across just as often as a model of colloquial but effective articulation.
President Abraham Lincoln was a vulgarian and nervously unstable.
Greene later described Hill as a "vulgarian".
Ian Hamilton, to be fair, is not a vulgarian: he has good credentials as a biographer, poet and critic.
He was a vulgarian!
And a vulgarian!
Lord Gensifer would consider such an action ridiculous and discreditable-a vulgarian trying to ape his betters.
"You pathetic vulgarian!
Very easily-as Johann Smith was an old vulgarian who regretted only the temptations he had been forced to pass up.