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Piquant   /pˈikənt/   Listen
Piquant

adjective
1.
Having an agreeably pungent taste.  Synonyms: savory, savoury, spicy, zesty.
2.
Engagingly stimulating or provocative.  Synonym: salty.  "Salty language"
3.
Attracting or delighting.  Synonym: engaging.  "A piquant face with large appealing eyes"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Piquant" Quotes from Famous Books



... congregated and talked of her faults and beauties, more was said of her charms than her sins. They fell into relating their stories of her, even the soberest of them, as if with a sense of humour in them, as indeed the point of such anecdotes was generally humorous because of a certain piquant boldness and lawless wild spirit shown in them. The story of the Chaplain, Roxholm heard again, and many others as fantastic. The retorts of this young female Ishmael upon her detractors and assailers, on such rare occasions as she encountered ...
— His Grace of Osmonde • Frances Hodgson Burnett

... to pass around the dusky, piquant, Arlesian sausages, and lobsters in their dazzling red cuirasses, prawns of large size and brilliant color, the echinus with its prickly outside and dainty morsel within, the clovis, esteemed by the epicures of the South as more than rivalling ...
— The Count of Monte Cristo • Alexandre Dumas, Pere

... discretion itself when she returned. She had surely seen Frank. No doubt she anticipated piquant developments at Mentone. ...
— Sacred And Profane Love • E. Arnold Bennett

... thing that flashed through Bansemer's brain was the realisation that she was far more beautiful than he had expected her to be. There was a truly aristocratic loveliness in the rather piquant face, and she undeniably possessed "manner." Maturity had improved her vastly, he confessed with strange exultation; age had been kinder than youth. He forgot the play, seldom taking his eyes from the back which again had been turned to him. Calculating, he reached the conclusion ...
— Jane Cable • George Barr McCutcheon

... extremely modern story founded on old Norwegian folk-lore—the folk-lore which Asbjoernsen and Moe collected, and Dasent translated for our delight in childhood. Old and new are curiously mixed; but the result is piquant and not in the least absurd, because the story rests on problems which are neither old nor new, but eternal, and on emotions which are neither older nor newer than the breast of man. To be sure, the true devotee of Ibsen will not be content with ...
— Adventures in Criticism • Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch


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