Definition of "tawdry"
tawdry
noun
countable and uncountable, plural tawdries
(obsolete) Anything gaudy and cheap; pretentious finery.
Quotations
That fiddling, parading fellow (you know who I mean) made us wait for him two hours […] only for the sake of having a little more tawdry upon his housings […].
1748, [Samuel Richardson], “Letter LXV”, in Clarissa. Or, The History of a Young Lady: […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to VII), London: […] S[amuel] Richardson; […]
adjective
comparative tawdrier, superlative tawdriest
(of clothing, appearance, etc.) Cheap and gaudy; showy.
Quotations
This wasn't really a room for me; the green curtains before the windows were rather tawdry, and there was anything but an abundance of nails on the walls for hanging one's wardrobe.
1890, Knut Hamsen, translated by Sverre Lyngstad, Sult (Hunger), Paperback, 2016 edition, Canongate Books, Ltd., Part One, page 34
(of character, behavior, situations, etc.) Unseemly, base, shameful.
Quotations
After months of flat-out lying to the public, former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards finally copped to having a sleazy extramarital fling […] The tawdry affair has dogged Edwards over the past few months.
2008 August 9, Clemente Lisi, “Lusty Lies of Don Juan John”, in New York Post, retrieved 16 December 2013