Thesaurus / new looks
FEEDBACKsynonyms for new looks
synonyms for new looks
- hobby
- innovation
- mania
- passion
- trend
- amusement
- caprice
- chic
- conceit
- custom
- fancy
- fashion
- frivolity
- furor
- humor
- in
- kick
- kink
- mode
- quirk
- rage
- sport
- style
- thing
- vagary
- vogue
- whim
- whimsy
- wrinkle
- dernier cri
- fool notion
- in thing
- latest word
- newest wrinkle
- new look
- passing fancy
Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
On this page you'll find 62 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to new looks, such as: all the rage, avant-garde, craze, fad, hip, and in vogue.
How to use new looks in a sentence
Descending the Alps to the east or south into Piedmont, a new world lies around and before you.
GLANCES AT EUROPEHORACE GREELEYHere began indeed, in the drab surroundings of the workshop, in the silent mystery of the laboratory, the magic of the new age.
THE UNSOLVED RIDDLE OF SOCIAL JUSTICESTEPHEN LEACOCKJoe looked at her with a smile, his face still solemn and serious for all its youth and the fires of new-lit hope behind his eyes.
THE BONDBOYGEORGE W. (GEORGE WASHINGTON) OGDENThere seems something in that also which I could spare only very reluctantly from a new Bible in the world.
THE SALVAGING OF CIVILISATIONH. G. (HERBERT GEORGE) WELLSWe should have to admit that the new law does little or nothing to relieve such a situation.
READINGS IN MONEY AND BANKINGCHESTER ARTHUR PHILLIPSShe observed his pale looks, and the distracted wandering of his eyes; but she would not notice either.
THE PASTOR'S FIRE-SIDE VOL. 3 OF 4JANE PORTERGenoa has but recently and partially felt the new impulse, yet even here the march of improvement is visible.
GLANCES AT EUROPEHORACE GREELEYThe "new world" was really found in the wonder-years of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
THE UNSOLVED RIDDLE OF SOCIAL JUSTICESTEPHEN LEACOCKHer eldest daughter married in America, and was well known as a modeller in wax in New York.
WOMEN IN THE FINE ARTS, FROM THE SEVENTH CENTURY B.C. TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY A.D.CLARA ERSKINE CLEMENTJudged from this point of view only, the elasticity provided by the new law is doubtless adequate.
READINGS IN MONEY AND BANKINGCHESTER ARTHUR PHILLIPS