She was talking about their treatment of Britain's envoy to China with a senior cop at a Buckingham Palace garden party on Wednesday.
It came after David Cameron was caught saying Afghanistan and Nigeria were "fabulously degenerate".
Buckingham Palace said the Chinese state visit was "greatly fruitful".
The welcome to President Xi was a piece of the administration's approach of pursuing Chinese venture.
The Queen's comments were gotten on tape on Tuesday as she was acquainted with Metropolitan Police Commander Lucy D'Orsi, who the ruler is told had managed security amid President Xi's visit to the UK in October.
She is heard to say: "Gracious, misfortune."
"Exceptional"
An authority went ahead to tell the Queen that Commander D'Orsi had been "genuinely, truly undermined by the Chinese, however she figured out how to stand her ground and stay in summon".
Administrator D'Orsi told the Queen: "I was the Gold Commander so I'm not certain whether you knew, but rather it was peaceful a testing time for..."
"I did," the Queen said.
Administrator D'Orsi proceeded with: "It was at the point they left Lancaster House and let me know that the trek was off, that I felt..,"
The Queen said: "They were extremely discourteous to the diplomat."
Administrator D'Orsi answered: "They were... it was exceptionally inconsiderate and undiplomatic I thought."
The Queen depicted it as "extraordinary".A Buckingham Palace representative later said: "We don't remark on the Queen's private discussions.
"Be that as it may, the Chinese State Visit was to a great degree fruitful and all gatherings worked nearly to guarantee it continued easily."
No official response has originated from the Chinese powers yet scope has been edited, with BBC World TV blanked-out amid a report on the discussion. A year ago, the official talk was of an exchange centered state visit introducing a "brilliant time" for relations between the two nations.
We now know, on account of a discussion in the Queen's castle plant, that it was a trying time in the background.
Obtuse talking, out in the open, is ordinarily the safeguard of the Queen's significant other.
In the 80s, Prince Philip cautioned some British understudies in China that they'd get "slitty eyes" on the off chance that they stayed there too long.
Also, Prince Charles - who's maintained a strategic distance from two Chinese state dinners in the UK - depicted a few authorities in a released diary as "shocking old waxworks".
Buckingham Palace - while not remarking on what they call a private discussion - host focused on that all gatherings worked nearly to guarantee a greatly fruitful Chinese state visit continued easily.
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