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Newfangled   /nˌufˈæŋgəld/   Listen
Newfangled

adjective
1.
(of a new kind or fashion) gratuitously new.  Synonym: new.  "She buys all these new-fangled machines and never uses them"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Newfangled" Quotes from Famous Books



... was working wonders with the new Pinkford's enamel paint, I determined to try it. I bought two tins of red on my way home. I hastened through tea, went into the garden and painted some flower-pots. I called out Carrie, who said: "You've always got some newfangled craze;" but she was obliged to admit that the flower-pots looked remarkably well. Went upstairs into the servant's bedroom and painted her washstand, towel-horse, and chest of drawers. To my mind it was an extraordinary improvement, but as an example of the ...
— The Diary of a Nobody • George Grossmith and Weedon Grossmith

... have some little dainty ready for him. He acceded, but unwillingly, for it was an innovation on the habits of a lifetime, and he felt as if he should never be able to arrange his rounds aright with this newfangled notion of a ...
— Wives and Daughters • Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell

... the army and in politics, and she had a great contempt for music and art and philosophy. She used to declare that the Prince Consort had brought all that stuff over out of Germany. She always sniffed when Bartley asked me to play for him. She considered that a newfangled way of making a ...
— Alexander's Bridge and The Barrel Organ • Willa Cather and Alfred Noyes

... already observed, that when one company is too hard for another, the lower in reputation has always been forced to exhibit fine newfangled foppery, to draw the multitude after them; of these expedients, singing and dancing had formerly been most effectual; but, at the time I am speaking of, our English music had been so discountenanced since the taste of Italian Operas prevailed, that it was to no purpose to pretend to it. Dancing, ...
— A History of Pantomime • R. J. Broadbent

... little apartment of five rooms, twenty minutes removed by Subway from the fish store; her bedroom, all pink and yellow maple; his; a kitchen, parlor, and dining room worked out happily in white-muslin curtains, spindle-legged parlor chairs, Henry's newfangled chifferobe and bed with a fine depth of mattress, and a kitchen with eight shining pots above the sink and a border of geese, cut out to the snip of Ann's own scissors, waddling ...
— The Vertical City • Fannie Hurst


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