Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Having multiple
hues ;colorful
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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"We mimic the artwork," said Ms. Bancroft, referring to the multihued, three-dimensional, geometrically asymmetrical Dorothea Rockburne paintings on display.
'Oh What a Night' for Parrish Museum Marshall Heyman 2011
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The red-light districts in early Los Angeles were notorious not just for their dens of vice but also for their multihued populations.
A Renegade History of the United States Thaddeus Russell 2010
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Conductor Corrado Rovaris drew a lively, multihued performance from 25-member orchestra.
Divided Inside, in Theme and Structure Heidi Waleson 2011
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With just some meager splotches of blue peeking through billowy cumulus clouds, I'm not sure I'd call this photo "colorful," yet it's difficult not to be struck by the multihued white picket fence, a study of light and shadow optimistically evocative, says Ms. Lyden, of "The American Dream."
Trained Toward the Heavens Arnie Cooper 2011
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Conductor Corrado Rovaris drew a lively, multihued performance from 25-member orchestra.
Divided Inside, in Theme and Structure Heidi Waleson 2011
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Steps are being taken to ensure that Pixar's future remains as bright as those multihued balloons that send Carl's home into the stratosphere.
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Use: The dwarf poinciana is a small-tree-size shrub, with attractive multihued flowers.
Ponytail palm, croton and dwarf poinciana: ornamental plants and flowers of tropical Mexico 2009
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Just blocks from the epicenter of the riots stand The Watts Towers, an amalgam of steel, concrete and multihued ornaments that graze the sky like cathedral spires, rising as high as 99 feet.
The Watts Towers, Sturdy Survivors Arnie Cooper 2011
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Use: The dwarf poinciana is a small-tree-size shrub, with attractive multihued flowers.
Ponytail palm, croton and dwarf poinciana: ornamental plants and flowers of tropical Mexico 2009
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Paulo Szot was wonderful as the status-conscious, noseless Kovalyov, ricocheting from hysteria to self-pity (we see through his lyrical laments) to self-importance; his baritone was multihued and penetrating, except during the noisiest orchestra moments.
The Sweet Smell of Success Heidi Waleson 2010
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