1Graceful and stylish appearance or manner; elegance.
Example sentencesExamples
Our vision was to create for our guests a place of inspiration, ‘a home away from home’, combining elegancy, individuality, pleasure and comfort.
We got inside the red-carpeted resort, full of elegancy and expense.
The second was green and almost see-through, its fragile elegancy disturbed only by a shallow circular hole on one side.
Elegancy are timelessness are in the air.
2Something that is elegant.
I do hope you will study a little of the proprieties and elegancies of life
Example sentencesExamples
Perhaps it was not fair to expect him to feel how very much he was her inferior in talent, and all the elegancies of mind.
When we were packing up the things to come here, our friends expressed their astonishment at our taking so many of the little elegancies of life.
With many it is a curious fancy, to dress Easter-eggs in elegant forms and keep as toilet elegancies.
The gentlewoman's primary appeal over time came to rest on the ‘elegancies of her person’, and as with any ‘gentlewoman’ in ‘semi-civilized’ society, woe betide her if she should step outside her ‘department.’
Definition of elegancy in US English:
elegancy
nounˈeliɡənsē
1Graceful and stylish appearance or manner; elegance.
Example sentencesExamples
Our vision was to create for our guests a place of inspiration, ‘a home away from home’, combining elegancy, individuality, pleasure and comfort.
Elegancy are timelessness are in the air.
We got inside the red-carpeted resort, full of elegancy and expense.
The second was green and almost see-through, its fragile elegancy disturbed only by a shallow circular hole on one side.
2Something that is elegant.
I do hope you will study a little of the proprieties and elegancies of life
Example sentencesExamples
When we were packing up the things to come here, our friends expressed their astonishment at our taking so many of the little elegancies of life.
The gentlewoman's primary appeal over time came to rest on the ‘elegancies of her person’, and as with any ‘gentlewoman’ in ‘semi-civilized’ society, woe betide her if she should step outside her ‘department.’
Perhaps it was not fair to expect him to feel how very much he was her inferior in talent, and all the elegancies of mind.
With many it is a curious fancy, to dress Easter-eggs in elegant forms and keep as toilet elegancies.