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-style
1a combining form of style.
blastostyle.
-style
2a combining form with the meanings “column,” “columned,” “having columns (of the kind specified)” used in the formation of compound words.
orthostyle; urostyle.
style
3[stahyl]
noun
a particular kind, sort, or type, as with reference to form, appearance, or character.
the baroque style; The style of the house was too austere for their liking.
a particular, distinctive, or characteristic mode of action or manner of acting.
They do these things in a grand style.
a mode of living, as with respect to expense or display.
an elegant, fashionable, or luxurious mode of living.
to live in style.
a mode of fashion, as in dress, especially good or approved fashion; elegance; smartness.
Synonyms: chicthe mode of expressing thought in writing or speaking by selecting and arranging words, considered with respect to clearness, effectiveness, euphony, or the like, that is characteristic of a group, period, person, personality, etc..
to write in the style of Faulkner; a familiar style; a pompous, pedantic style.
those components or features of a literary composition that have to do with the form of expression rather than the content of the thought expressed.
His writing is all style and no substance.
manner or tone adopted in discourse or conversation.
a patronizing style of addressing others.
a particular, distinctive, or characteristic mode or form of construction or execution in any art or work.
Her painting is beginning to show a personal style.
a descriptive or distinguishing appellation, especially a legal, official, or recognized title.
a firm trading under the style of Smith, Jones, & Co.
the gnomon of a sundial.
a method of reckoning time.
Zoology., a small, pointed process or part.
Botany., a narrow, usually cylindrical and more or less filiform extension of the pistil, which, when present, bears the stigma at its apex.
the rules or customs of typography, punctuation, spelling, and related matters used by a newspaper, magazine, publishing house, etc., or in a specific publication.
verb (used with object)
to call by a given title or appellation; denominate; name; call.
The pope is styled His or Your Holiness.
to design or arrange in accordance with a given or new style.
to style an evening dress; to style one's hair.
to bring into conformity with a specific style or give a specific style to.
Please style this manuscript.
verb (used without object)
to do decorative work with a style or stylus.
style
/ staɪl /
noun
a form of appearance, design, or production; type or make
a new style of house
the way in which something is done
good or bad style
the manner in which something is expressed or performed, considered as separate from its intrinsic content, meaning, etc
a distinctive, formal, or characteristic manner of expression in words, music, painting, etc
elegance or refinement of manners, dress, etc
prevailing fashion in dress, looks, etc
a fashionable or ostentatious mode of existence
to live in style
the particular mode of orthography, punctuation, design, etc, followed in a book, journal, etc, or in a printing or publishing house
the distinguishing title or form of address of a person or firm
botany the stalk of a carpel, bearing the stigma
zoology a slender pointed structure, such as the piercing mouthparts of certain insects
a method of expressing or calculating dates See Old Style New Style
another word for stylus
the arm of a sundial
verb
to design, shape, or tailor
to style hair
to adapt or make suitable (for)
to make consistent or correct according to a printing or publishing style
to name or call; designate
to style a man a fool
(intr) to decorate objects using a style or stylus
style
The slender part of a flower pistil, connecting the ovary and the stigma. The pollen tube grows through the style delivering the pollen nuclei to the ovary.
See more at flower pollination
Other Word Forms
- styleless adjective
- stylelessness noun
- stylelike adjective
- antistyle noun
- counterstyle noun
- misstyle verb
- restyle verb
- unstyled adjective
- well-styled adjective
- styler noun
- stylar adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of style1
Word History and Origins
Origin of style1
Idioms and Phrases
go out of style, to become unfashionable.
The jacket he's wearing went out of style ten years ago.
in style, fashionable.
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Swedish boss Jeglertz put his own stamp on their style, making little tweaks and encouraging more dynamism from his team.
Earlier this year, BBC Sport looked at the various formations, playing styles and tactics Tuchel might adopt, ranging from the fast and furious to the more cautious and pragmatic.
For Oliphant, every part of the cartoon — subject, style and structure — is important, and it’s that reverence for attentive construction that’s been so rapidly phased out.
But manager Natalia Arroyo is still early in her tenure so it could take some time before she is able to instil her style of play on the squad.
Unlike her own style, Maeve dresses in dark colors with heavy, metallic jewelry and sports a shaggy mullet.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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