Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet IDIOSYNCRASY


IDIOSYNCRASY

Definition av IDIOSYNCRASY

  1. egenart, egenhet, egenskap
  2. idiosynkrasi

9

Antal bokstäver

12

Är palindrom

Nej

18
AS
CR
CRA
DI
DIO
ID
IO

1

1

AC
ACD
ACI


Sök efter IDIOSYNCRASY på:



Exempel på hur du använder IDIOSYNCRASY i en mening

  • Toriyama once stated, seemingly humorously, that Krillin's lack of a nose is because he has a "physical idiosyncrasy" that allows him to breathe through the pores of his skin.
  • Benzphetamine is contraindicated in patients with advanced arteriosclerosis, symptomatic cardiovascular disease, moderate to severe hypertension, hyperthyroidism, known hypersensitivity or idiosyncrasy to sympathomimetic amines, and glaucoma, or who have recently used a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI).
  • Hamann's influence led Herder to confess to his wife later in life that "I have too little reason and too much idiosyncrasy", yet Herder can justly claim to have founded a new school of German political thought.
  • Sugden and Damsky stated that like other chess players of all ages and ranks among whom there is generally no lack of idiosyncrasy or superstition, Tartakower, a trenchant wit, took a most unsightly old hat with him from tournament to tournament.
  • Legal realists rejected formalism and static legal rules; instead, they searched for the experiential and the role of human idiosyncrasy in the development of law.
  • Scott of The New York Times commended the performances for displaying "flashes of idiosyncrasy and flair" despite the "pedestrian script" but was critical of the film overall for having various "inspirational sports-movie clichés" and "competence that is more flat-footed than inspiring" in both the drama and boxing scenes.
  • Written under the house pseudonym of "Victor Appleton", a stylistic idiosyncrasy of the books was that they took great trouble to avoid repetition of the unadorned word "said", instead using a different quotative verb, or modifying adverbial words or phrases in a kind of elegant variation.
  • " In The Observer, Neil Spencer wrote that although "Mansun's guitar-driven sound veers rather too erratically between Nineties Britpop and Sixties psychedelia, the chime and idiosyncrasy of the songs hold steady, and with a scope that runs from Liverpudlian lovers to transvestite vicars, it's quintessentially English pop.
  • This idiosyncrasy of Pumpokol seems to be shared with the language of the Jie, suggesting that Jie is more closely related to Pumpokol than other Yeniseian languages.
  • Skillful master of the double meaning, the Cuban's idiosyncrasy, his ingenuity, witty remarks and his love for highly erotic themes amusingly disguised are some of his main features.
  • Their sense of humor embraced idiosyncrasy and spontaneity with wordplay, puns, and inside jokes that often belied the transgressiveness of their subject matter.
  • It also seems possible that some of the actual recording equipment was transferred to the Odeon studios, for a distinctive feature of the tracking of the groove-cutting equipment in Fonotipia records shows a single revolution halfway through the side where the groove is widely spaced, and this idiosyncrasy (a security feature so that pirate stampers electroplated from a Fonotipia original could be instantly recognised) occasionally persists under Odeon's aegis.
  • He pays tribute to the peculiar character of the medium, its sparkling idiosyncrasy, by his use of the white outline, which detaches the masses of color from one another, keeping them in one plane as effectively as the black bounding line in favor with one school of modern painters; and which has the advantage of giving the white ground of the paper a chance to play its enlivening part in the general scheme.
  • " Brett Berk of Vanity Fair summed up as follows: "The quality of Glee second season has been something like the topography of Utah, or the acting career of Amanda Peet—blandly passable and relying on its good looks, but stumbling occasionally upon unfathomable idiosyncrasy, whose presence is at once baffling, frightening, and a bit melancholy—in a good way.
  • This unique garment is also a fundamental part of the idiosyncrasy of Boyacense popular music known as Carranga, music that was born in the rural areas of that department and is mainly accompanied by the Tiple, the Guitar and the Tiple Requinto (chordophone) of Colombia.
  • It's dispiriting to hear Riff Raff contort himself into the shape of a mediocre pop-rap song like “Maybe You Love Me” or to be scraped clean of all his idiosyncrasy on “Time,” an otherwise amusing country-rap tune.
  • At that time, every provincial stage had a comedian who tried to imitate Helmerding's specifically Berlin way of speaking with its nasal timbre, his original sharp, hasty, somewhat angular movements, his peculiar parlando in the couplet recital - no one achieved him in his idiosyncrasy: as the Berliners say - "sie kriegten die Forsche nicht raus" (they couldn't get the Forsche out).
  • Jonathan Holland of Variety considered the "terrifically lensed" film to be "a good old-fashioned melodrama" that manages to have enough "intelligent idiosyncrasy" to give it its own "power and charm".
  • He says it is carried dramaturgically by the choir of ghosts, which corresponds to the modern concept of post-traumatic stress disorder, and is one of many cases where the play lets mythology and modern events interweave and inform each other, creating a "poetic idiosyncrasy" full of recognition.
  • Bombo Fica was developing through his presentations a type of comedy with contingent humor, caricaturing the national idiosyncrasy, telling fast stories marking a particular, own and recognizable style in the public.


Förberedelsen av sidan tog: 194,48 ms.