The posthumous vulgarities of our day add another grimness to death.
But consider how much space is taken up with mere trivialities and vulgarities under the name of news.
It is the vulgarities of civilization, it is the ugliness of contemporary life—so unlike that Earthly Paradise of the poetic dream—that have driven him from his natural and proper work.
Are you ignorant that marriage, to men of a high stamp, is either a chain which binds them to the lowest vulgarities of existence, or a wing on which to rise to the highest summits of the social world?
Flavie," he added, again pressing her arm upon his heart, "did you expect to hear thevulgarities of love from me?
It is idle to attempt to show that Keats did not suffer keenly from the vulgarities of Blackwood and the Quarterly.
A halo of sacredness has hitherto invested the figure of Milton, and our image of him has dwelt securely in ideal remoteness from the vulgarities of life.
There seemed impiety in associating the new avatar of his love with the ribald vulgarities of the divorce court, in dragging the blossom of his worship through its noisome mire.
With the vulgarities and audacities, the shifts and the doubles of this shuffling man of prey, no one need again be troubled.
The visible vulgarities and deficiencies of his style went hardly deeper than the surface.
The vulgarities which we use at home we shall use abroad—the coarse sayings, the low jest, the vulgar speeches, the grammatical blunders.
The home circle should be held too sacred to be polluted with the vulgarities of languages, which could have originated nowhere but in low and groveling minds.
The occasional vulgaritiesof which he was guilty in his original work do not intrude here; they were superficial and were not a part of the man.
The great style--the style which is like gold and bronze in an age of clay and rubble--remains as the only sure refuge we have from the howling vulgarities of our generation.
He will make it his business to compete with the poet, and not, after the manner of Drury Lane, with the accidents of life and the vulgarities of nature.
Take Polin, who is supposed to express vulgaritieswith unusual success.
His friends called him jestingly as Chateaubriand was called, 'le grand ennuyé,' but it was precisely his vague discontent with the puerilities and the vulgarities of existence which made his affinity to Nadine Napraxine.
And we, in regard to the aims of our Christian life, have to make a continual effort to bring and keep them before us, or they are crowded out by the intrusive vulgarities and dazzling brilliances of the present.
And do you think they could ever have let this incident alone without spoiling it by expanding it, and putting all manner of vulgarities into their story about it?
With cruder colour and composition, they carried still farther the vulgaritiesof Utamaro's declining period.
Some may think that, if he had devotion enough to surmount the vulgarities of her position and manners and ways of thought, his love could hardly be such as to yield so soon; but Eppy was not in herself vulgar.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vulgarities" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.