ILL FAVOUR, ILL-FAVOURED
ADJECTIVES
1390 — MALGRACIOUS ill-favoured, uncomely; ungracious, disobliging → obs.
1513 — HARD-FAVOURED having a hard or unpleasing appearance or look; stern-faced; coarse-featured; ill-favoured, ugly → arch.
1830 — UNBONNIE → UNBONNY ugly, ill-favoured, unsightly → Sc.
1838 — ILL-HUED ill-favoured → Eng. dial.
1897 — ILL-HOITED ill-favoured → Sc.
1898 — BAD-LIKE of forbidding aspect; ill-favoured → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1900 — GALDROCH ill-favoured, haggard → Sc. obs.
1905 — ILL-FAIRED ill-favoured → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1905 — ILL-LIKED ill-favoured → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
NOUNS
1425 — MALGRACE ill grace; ill favour; disfavour → obs.
1882 — MALGRACE something of ill grace or ill favour; something unbecoming → arch.
NOUNS, PERSON
1738 — A GOOSE AMONG SWANS an uncomely or ill-favoured person in the midst of beautiful ones; an uncultivated person among the cultivated; an ignorant person among the learned
1896 — PARTAN an ill-favoured or ill-natured person; a term of contempt → Sc. & N. Eng. dial.
1904 — SCRAMMEL a lean, gaunt, ill-favoured person or animal → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
VERBS
..19C — BE NAUGHT BUT TEETH AND EYES to be ill-favoured → Eng. dial.