释义 |
Definition of recherché in English: recherchéadjective rəˈʃɛːʃeɪrəˌʃɛrˈʃeɪ Rare, exotic, or obscure. 罕见的,难得的;珍贵的,珍奇的;不平常的,异国风味的;模糊的,晦涩的 a few linguistic terms are perhaps a bit recherché for the average readership 有些语言学术语对普通读者而言可能有点晦涩难懂。 Example sentencesExamples - Apart from a few more recherché knots, there are three basic ways of knotting a tie nowadays: the Windsor (a deplorable invention), the Half-Windsor (ditto, without even the courage of its convictions) and the classic four-in-hand.
- Though it was found recherché by his contemporaries, its expressive power came to be acknowledged, and its lyrical melody and richly varied textures to be given their due.
- The language is literate without being recherché, and we are kept in steady involvement and suspense.
- For, though it may appear on the surface to be a specialist disc, of somewhat recherché material, it cannot fail to delight anyone who loves the sound of a cappella singing at its finest.
- That is all well and good but constant repetition and even his most recherché songs become hackneyed.
- Her first sortie into live comedy was a little too recherché for some audiences.
- The evening will encompass the well-known as well as the recherché material of these writers, be they lyricists or musicians.
- It is a simple, episodic tale - despite its intriguing, recherché information - which gives credit to children's capacity to learn anything.
- He wrote these in the Forties, when medieval music was even more of a recherché taste than it is now.
- Why are Stella's precious, recherché creations nestling here, among the bog-standard sportsware, the hoodies, the baseball caps, the functional swimsuits, the sweat-pants?
- Wagner's ingeniousness with plot is matched by his cleverness with the recherché literary conceits - little touches that you can't help admiring, like statues in a boxwood maze, even as you hurry past.
- Empiricists deny this: they think that even the most recherché mathematical ideas can be derived from sensory experience by abstraction and idealization.
Synonyms obscure, rare, esoteric, abstruse, arcane, recondite, little known exotic, strange, unusual, unfamiliar, out of the ordinary
OriginFrench, literally 'carefully sought out', past participle of rechercher. Definition of recherché in US English: recherchéadjectiverəˌSHerˈSHārəˌʃɛrˈʃeɪ Rare, exotic, or obscure. 罕见的,难得的;珍贵的,珍奇的;不平常的,异国风味的;模糊的,晦涩的 a few linguistic terms are perhaps a bit recherché for the average readership 有些语言学术语对普通读者而言可能有点晦涩难懂。 Example sentencesExamples - He wrote these in the Forties, when medieval music was even more of a recherché taste than it is now.
- Why are Stella's precious, recherché creations nestling here, among the bog-standard sportsware, the hoodies, the baseball caps, the functional swimsuits, the sweat-pants?
- Wagner's ingeniousness with plot is matched by his cleverness with the recherché literary conceits - little touches that you can't help admiring, like statues in a boxwood maze, even as you hurry past.
- Empiricists deny this: they think that even the most recherché mathematical ideas can be derived from sensory experience by abstraction and idealization.
- Though it was found recherché by his contemporaries, its expressive power came to be acknowledged, and its lyrical melody and richly varied textures to be given their due.
- It is a simple, episodic tale - despite its intriguing, recherché information - which gives credit to children's capacity to learn anything.
- Apart from a few more recherché knots, there are three basic ways of knotting a tie nowadays: the Windsor (a deplorable invention), the Half-Windsor (ditto, without even the courage of its convictions) and the classic four-in-hand.
- For, though it may appear on the surface to be a specialist disc, of somewhat recherché material, it cannot fail to delight anyone who loves the sound of a cappella singing at its finest.
- That is all well and good but constant repetition and even his most recherché songs become hackneyed.
- Her first sortie into live comedy was a little too recherché for some audiences.
- The language is literate without being recherché, and we are kept in steady involvement and suspense.
- The evening will encompass the well-known as well as the recherché material of these writers, be they lyricists or musicians.
Synonyms obscure, rare, esoteric, abstruse, arcane, recondite, little known
OriginFrench, literally ‘carefully sought out’, past participle of rechercher. |