Advertisement
Advertisement
baroque
[buh-rohk, b
adjective
(often initial capital letter), of or relating to a style of architecture and art originating in Italy in the early 17th century and variously prevalent in Europe and the New World for a century and a half, characterized by free and sculptural use of the classical orders and ornament, by forms in elevation and plan suggesting movement, and by dramatic effect in which architecture, painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts often worked to combined effect.
(sometimes initial capital letter), of or relating to the musical period following the Renaissance, extending roughly from 1600 to 1750.
extravagantly ornate, florid, and convoluted in character or style.
the baroque prose of the novel's more lurid passages.
irregular in shape.
baroque pearls.
noun
(often initial capital letter), the baroque style or period.
anything extravagantly ornamented, especially something so ornate as to be in bad taste.
an irregularly shaped pearl.
baroque
/ bəˈrəʊk, bəˈrɒk /
noun
a style of architecture and decorative art that flourished throughout Europe from the late 16th to the early 18th century, characterized by extensive ornamentation
a 17th-century style of music characterized by extensive use of the thorough bass and of ornamentation
any ornate or heavily ornamented style
adjective
denoting, being in, or relating to the baroque
(of pearls) irregularly shaped
Word History and Origins
Origin of baroque1
Word History and Origins
Origin of baroque1
Example Sentences
This dip takes its inspiration from a more baroque, arguably campy, ancestor: the seven-layer.
It was an opera house, and it was really there, with its baroque moldings and balconies sprawling out atop the Empire Polo Club stage at this year’s Coachella festival.
Continuing apace, voters in November elected a political newcomer and relative moderate, Daniel Lurie, as mayor and punctuated the sentiment by gifting him a more simpatico Board of Supervisors at San Francisco’s baroque City Hall.
For Ryan Murphy, entertainment is a series of baroque monstrosities, human and otherwise, as seen in ‘Grotesquerie’ and his latest installment of ‘Monsters.’
God knows, having worked a whole career in government, I understood their critique of its baroque and sclerotic routines.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse