Elegance by virtue of being fashionable.
To display or act proudly, ostentatiously or pretentiously.
Sinònims
Examples for "chic"
Examples for "chic"
1A sporty-meets-chic number resembled an updated version of an 'Arabian Nights' character.
2The idea of chic, must-have plants goes back a very long time.
3For a few days each year cosmopolitan chic enlivened this rural retreat.
4She couldn't remember ever looking or feeling that chic, young and carefree.
5Jonathan Adler: Happy chic style finds a home in Jonathan Adler's collection.
1He had the smartness - that's the sign of a great star.
2He had a very great respect for the smartness of that hunter.
3She said a good word for the smartness of his little yacht.
4His appearance and smartness indicated resolution and gave promise of future success.
5Now with all her smartness old Granny Fox had forgotten one thing.
1A mere 10 minutes from Floripa and chichi Lagoa, here was another world.
2Dive bars have been replaced with chichi cafes and high-end boutiques.
3You get the picture: it's fabulous, expensive and chichi, but with attitude in spades.
4Or at least it was all very chichi until Jagr stormed through the doors.
5If anything, this rather chichi experiment has increased her allure.
1Despite a definite visual stylishness, the film is more baffling than intriguing.
2He performs this difficult literary balancing act with stylishness and many a chuckle.
3But it was not the vivid New York stylishness.
4These Hungarians combine a joyous al fresco spirit with a thoroughgoing stylishness and musical sensitivity.
5The young batsman on debut made 37 with a stylishness that generated a perhaps disproportionate excitement.
1A figure of exquisite modishness, she perched upon the porch rail near Chester.
2George regarded the short thoroughfare made notorious by the dilettantism, the modishness, and the witticisms of art.
3Obsessed with the modishness of the hour
4But originality and modishness are different things.
5The newcomers were garbed in that debonair and "cultured" modishness so dear to the hearts of magazine illustrators.
1The sunglasses and low ponytail (requisite in fashion circles these days) add that essential chicness.
2In spite of this, he greeted him formally and immediately offered him a drink of great chicness, just as his wife had told him to.
3Chicness is now no longer reserved for the few.
4"I didn't know chicness was a word."
5"Don't you know anything about chicness?"
1Obama's law is by no means the last word on health care.
2I cannot help it; it is my last word; it is so.
3We also know that violence like this won't have the last word.
4That last word, trade, really is at the heart of the matter.
5Thursday Food leaves the last word to local elite hurdler Rushell Clayton.
Imposingly fashionable and elegant.
1The in-house bar and restaurant continue the swank theme and top-quality service.
2He'd gone into Tiffany's and into some of the other swank shops.
3His lavish style of entertainment they labelled 'swank'-horribleword but very expressive!
4Yet it's done so without swank ad agencies or a big-name fashion photographer.
5So they upped and moved to a swank part of New York City.
6Did anyone happen to see a swank red automobile that night?
7And it would be swank- athingwe detest in the army.
8Not exactly the swank sort of crib she expected from vampires.
9All coming quite naturally and simply; no swank, no false modesty.
10And certainly not befitting the Starr brand of swank and swagger.
11You wouldn't believe how full of the purest swank some of these pros.
12They'll swank for a week if you give them all that.
13Well, as a matter of fact, that's just a bit of useful swank.
14As far as that goes we have nothing to swank about in Canada!
15I thought at the time it was a bit of swank!'
16The swank meeting room was teeming with sell-side analysts, media people, tax strategists, etc.