incivility

Etymology
From, from , from , from +  (from ), equivalent to en.

Noun

 * 1)  The state of being uncivil; lack of courtesy; rudeness in manner.
 * 2) * 1668, David Lloyd, Memoires of the Lives, Actions, Sufferings, and Deaths of those Noble, Reverend, and Excellent Personages that suffered by Death, Sequestration, Decimation, and otherwise for the Protestant Religion, London: Samuel Speed, “The Life and Death of Robert Berkley,” p. 96,
 * Beat on proud Billows, Boreas blow,
 * Swell curled Waves, high as Jove’s roof,
 * Your incivility doth show,
 * That Innocence is tempest proof.
 * 1)  Any act of rudeness or ill-breeding.
 * 2) * 1889,, “A Face in the Dark” in Pennycomequicks, London: Spencer, Blackett & Hallam, Volume II, p. 54:
 * When my poor Sidebottom was alive, if there had been any unpleasantness between us during the day [...] I have shaken him at night to wake him up, that he might receive my pardon for an incivility said or done.
 * 1)  Lack of civilization; a state of rudeness or barbarism.
 * 1)  Any act of rudeness or ill-breeding.
 * 2) * 1889,, “A Face in the Dark” in Pennycomequicks, London: Spencer, Blackett & Hallam, Volume II, p. 54:
 * When my poor Sidebottom was alive, if there had been any unpleasantness between us during the day [...] I have shaken him at night to wake him up, that he might receive my pardon for an incivility said or done.
 * 1)  Lack of civilization; a state of rudeness or barbarism.
 * 1) * 1889,, “A Face in the Dark” in Pennycomequicks, London: Spencer, Blackett & Hallam, Volume II, p. 54:
 * When my poor Sidebottom was alive, if there had been any unpleasantness between us during the day [...] I have shaken him at night to wake him up, that he might receive my pardon for an incivility said or done.
 * 1)  Lack of civilization; a state of rudeness or barbarism.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Catalan: incivilitat
 * Finnish:
 * German: unhöfliches Benehmen, ,
 * Spanish: