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modish
[ moh-dish ]
modish
/ ˈ³¾É™ÊŠ»åɪʃ /
adjective
- in the current fashion or style; contemporary
Derived Forms
- ˈ³¾´Ç»å¾±²õ³ó±ô²â, adverb
- ˈ³¾´Ç»å¾±²õ³ó²Ô±ð²õ²õ, noun
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³¾´Ç»åi²õ³ó·±ô²â adverb
- ³¾´Ç»åi²õ³ó·²Ô±ð²õ²õ noun
- ³Ü²Ô·³¾´Ç»åi²õ³ó adjective
- un·³¾´Ç»åi²õ³ó·±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Example Sentences
Her appointment in San Francisco, under that ensemble’s modish music director, Seiji Ozawa, “projected a forward-looking vision of classical music,†the scholar Grace Wang has written.
“Bills, Bills, Bills†is dizzyingly complex, “Jumpin’, Jumpin’†is futuristically forceful and Beyoncé’s singing at the end of “Bug a Boo†is a soaring interjection of traditional glory into the modish present.
Hybridity, though of a different kind, is far more than a modish buzzword for the British designer Grace Wales Bonner, whose award-winning work has consistently mined the tensions inherent in racial, cultural and sexual intersection.
It is still uncertain, though, whether off-the-shelf exoskeletons can be made affordable, comfortable or modish enough for most of us to wish to wear one.
Now he is being played by Omar Sy, wearing a more modish, but equally dashing, flat cap and trench coat ensemble.
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