Noun, or adjective, synonymous with intellectual, and, as an adjective, a term also synonymous with elite, or generally carrying a connotation of high culture.
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Examples for "highbrow "
Examples for "highbrow "
1 Of course, we prefer the more highbrow approach to Labor Day celebrations.
2 Away from the set, however, he producer's taste was rather more highbrow .
3 This combination of highbrow and kitsch is not theirs alone, of course.
4 In today's context Fred Michel was the German, Adam Smith the highbrow .
5 And in a lot of ways, it wasn't highbrow enough for her.
1 So, we have a strong programme that covers populist and high - brow interests?
2 Well-educated cineastes were translating their high - brow influences into finely honed exploitation cinema.
3 Surrounded by museums, palaces and monuments, the city has a high - brow feel.
4 As ever in the UK, the political rows are extremely high - brow .
5 In fairness, we're all prepped for a high - brow war of words.
6 A WEEKEND of high - brow entertainment and sports is promised over the coming days.
7 This extraordinary racket is, at root, about the bewitching power of high - brow brands.
8 You can the high - brow stuff from now on, and you'll get along better.
9 One night at some snooty high - brow affair he worked, he met your mother.
10 The true story is that a rather high - brow seminar on Where Is Theatre Going?
11 He is equally at home to high - brow and populist material.
12 Mr Aronofsky is among the most high - brow of quasi-mainstream directors.
13 It was not high - brow but it was well thought out.
14 Has New Zealand given up on high - brow literature and embraced cheap and trashy sensationalism?
15 Sylvia and your grandfather were being so high - brow I was beginning to feel faint,
16 Roy Hodgson, by contrast, is a celebrated polyglot with a penchant for high - brow literature.
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