part two
other modern dictionaries are in agreement with collins and a google search.
Impudent sometimes used by some speakers as interchangeable with impertinent.
impertinent = same as impudent but impertinent also = "not pertinent" not related
impertinent
not showing proper respect; rude.
"an impertinent question"
rude, insolent, impolite, unmannerly, ill-mannered, bad-mannered, uncivil, discourteous
FORMAL
not pertinent to a particular matter; irrelevant.
"talk of ‘rhetoric’ and ‘strategy’ is impertinent to this process"
Impertinent originally meant just what it sounds like, "not pertinent, irrelevant," but it also came to mean "inappropriate, out of place" and therefore "intrusive, presumptuous; behaving without proper respect; insolent." It still carries a condescending air, so it's best used of or to a child being snippy to a grownup: "Don't be impertinent!" The stress is on the second syllable: im-PERT-inent.