INDELICACY
Source: 566, 567
indelicacy. Indelicacy, n. a want of taste or proper decency
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In‐del″i‐ca‐cy (?), n.; pl. Indelicacies (#). [[From Indelicate.]] The quality of being indelicate; want of delicacy, or of a nice sense of, or regard for, purity, propriety, or refinement in manners, language, etc.; rudeness; coarseness; also, that which is offensive to refined taste or purity of mind. The indelicacy of English comedy. Blair. Your papers would be chargeable with worse than indelicacy; they would be immoral. Addison.