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Definitions

pastiche

[pa-steesh, pah-] / pæˈstiʃ, pɑ- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

With that image as the seed, the character became, according to Walker-Webb, “a living, breathing pastiche of Black history and culture.”

From New York Times

The pastiche of its sprawl sets it apart from traditional studio compounds like the current Warner Bros. and Paramount lots, self-contained minicities more readily identifiable as places where this town exists.

From Los Angeles Times

“You’re actually solving the system of equations that govern the system,” he says, “not the pastiche of physical mechanisms that are approximately derived from the system of equations.”

From Science Magazine

His 2007 album, “Contemplations & Remembrances,” available on multiple streaming platforms, is not the wannabe pop/folk/soul pastiche common to moonlighting actors.

From Los Angeles Times

In this, his first Broadway show, he demonstrates the astonishing knack for dirty pastiche that has informed such follow-ups as “The Last Five Years,” “13” and “The Bridges of Madison County.”

From New York Times