"Bawdy" means obscene, and so might reasonably mean indecent, but it does not have a connotation of repulsiveness. "Loathsome" means repulsive but does not suggest indecency. I don't know that there is a single word which combines both ideas.
Shakespeare did not use the word "indecent" although he did use "decent". The word "lewd" might be the word he would choose to express this idea.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
Shakespeare does not use the word townsfolk.
Hath.
William Shakespeare sometimes uses the word gi in his plays. This word has the same meaning as the word give.
Shakespeare did not use the word "indecent" although he did use "decent". The word "lewd" might be the word he would choose to express this idea.
You are an indecent human being! :)
Their behaviour was indecent so they were arrested.
The word indecent does not contain a suffix. It does contain a prefix which is the letters I - N.
There are five phonemes in the word "indecent": /ɪn/ /d/ /iː/ /s/ /ənt/.
dirty, unpleasant, stinking, filthy, grubby, repellent, squalid, repulsive, obscene, crude, indecent, abusive, coarse, vulgar, lewd
There are three phonemes in the word "indecent": /ɪn/, /dɪ/, and /sənt/.
There are 6 phonemes in the word "indecent": /ɪ/ /n/ /d/ /iː/ /s/ /ə/.
The word "indecent" has 6 phonemes: /ɪ/, /n/, /d/, /iː/, /s/, /ənt/.
Indecent.
repulsive repugnant
The law forbade women to appear on stage. It was outrageous and indecent.