释义 |
Definition of connoisseur in English: connoisseurnoun ˌkɒnəˈsəː An expert judge in matters of taste. 鉴赏家,鉴定家;行家 音乐鉴赏家。 Example sentencesExamples - Plus, connoisseurs will soon be to able purchase originals for themselves.
- The connoisseurs came up with a surprising range of taste and bouquet descriptions.
- It will give an opportunity for the connoisseurs of food to fulfil their gastronomical desires.
- Fireworks are integral to the social life of the Japanese, who are perhaps the world's greatest firework artists and connoisseurs.
- It looks the same and only the connoisseur would tell the difference in taste.
- A leading connoisseur of bottled water last night advised consumers to pick and choose between bottled and mains water.
- Early catalogues served connoisseurs and noble visitors whilst also publicizing the taste and wealth of the owner.
- Raw concrete is a taste acquired by few outside a tight-knit commando of architectural connoisseurs.
- Certainly, there was a host of different dishes hot and steamy to cater to the tastes of connoisseurs.
- Wine connoisseurs demonstrate how to savour the true taste of wine without depending on the nose.
- For connoisseurs of intelligence fiction a few titles epitomize the essence of the craft.
- He was a connoisseur and he felt they were connoisseurs, too.
- Like the original structure, his piece has a beauty that lures connoisseurs.
- Beer connoisseurs argue that the brews don't taste as good as those made with malted barley.
- They have been created by expert designers to attract fashion connoisseurs and the textile industry at large.
- Caribbean mango connoisseurs argue over which variety is the most luscious.
- For beer connoisseurs it was one of the great events of the social calendar - a real ale festival at one of Scotland's finest country houses.
- Meanwhile the project seems to have provoked some bemused commentary among art connoisseurs.
- With just over a month to go before this year's grape harvest, vineyard owners and wine connoisseurs are hoping the good weather will continue.
- Local connoisseurs are seldom of much help in correcting the error.
Synonyms expert judge (of), authority (on), specialist (in) arbiter of taste, pundit, savant, one of the cognoscenti, aesthete gourmet, epicure, gastronome informal buff North American informal maven
Derivativesnoun It's the kind of connoisseurship you can feel good about: unlike some wines and good coffees, artisan cheese is decidedly anti-corporate, produced by co-ops and small dairies, often by very few people or families. Example sentencesExamples - When I argue that your connoisseurship or aestheticism are suspect and insist on my own highly materialist readings of things, it does not mean that our field is in disarray.
- Renowned for his visual acumen and connoisseurship, he grew up in Paris and New York, the son of a scholar of medieval church history.
- Experience can contribute to connoisseurship, but only if the consumer tastes with attention and an open mind.
- Why is a curatorial project in feminist revisionism, buttressed by scholarly discussions of Victorian domesticity, gender identity and literary culture, enveloped in a thick mantle of connoisseurship?
OriginEarly 18th century: from obsolete French, from conoistre 'know'. Rhymesà deux, agent provocateur, astir, auteur, aver, bestir, blur, bon viveur, burr, Chandigarh, coiffeur, concur, confer, cordon-bleu, cri de cœur, cur, danseur, Darfur, defer, demur, de rigueur, deter, entrepreneur, er, err, farceur, faute de mieux, fir, flâneur, Fleur, force majeure, fur, hauteur, her, infer, inter, jongleur, Kerr, littérateur, longueur, masseur, Monseigneur, monsieur, Montesquieu, Montreux, murre, myrrh, occur, pas de deux, Pasteur, per, pisteur, poseur, pot-au-feu, prefer, prie-dieu, pudeur, purr, raconteur, rapporteur, refer, répétiteur, restaurateur, saboteur, sabreur, seigneur, Sher, shirr, sir, skirr, slur, souteneur, spur, stir, tant mieux, transfer, Ur, vieux jeu, voyageur, voyeur, were, whirr Definition of connoisseur in US English: connoisseurnoun An expert judge in matters of taste. 鉴赏家,鉴定家;行家 音乐鉴赏家。 Example sentencesExamples - Meanwhile the project seems to have provoked some bemused commentary among art connoisseurs.
- Raw concrete is a taste acquired by few outside a tight-knit commando of architectural connoisseurs.
- Early catalogues served connoisseurs and noble visitors whilst also publicizing the taste and wealth of the owner.
- Fireworks are integral to the social life of the Japanese, who are perhaps the world's greatest firework artists and connoisseurs.
- For connoisseurs of intelligence fiction a few titles epitomize the essence of the craft.
- Plus, connoisseurs will soon be to able purchase originals for themselves.
- For beer connoisseurs it was one of the great events of the social calendar - a real ale festival at one of Scotland's finest country houses.
- Certainly, there was a host of different dishes hot and steamy to cater to the tastes of connoisseurs.
- A leading connoisseur of bottled water last night advised consumers to pick and choose between bottled and mains water.
- With just over a month to go before this year's grape harvest, vineyard owners and wine connoisseurs are hoping the good weather will continue.
- He was a connoisseur and he felt they were connoisseurs, too.
- Local connoisseurs are seldom of much help in correcting the error.
- Wine connoisseurs demonstrate how to savour the true taste of wine without depending on the nose.
- They have been created by expert designers to attract fashion connoisseurs and the textile industry at large.
- Beer connoisseurs argue that the brews don't taste as good as those made with malted barley.
- The connoisseurs came up with a surprising range of taste and bouquet descriptions.
- It looks the same and only the connoisseur would tell the difference in taste.
- Like the original structure, his piece has a beauty that lures connoisseurs.
- It will give an opportunity for the connoisseurs of food to fulfil their gastronomical desires.
- Caribbean mango connoisseurs argue over which variety is the most luscious.
Synonyms expert judge, expert judge of, authority, authority on, specialist, specialist in
OriginEarly 18th century: from obsolete French, from conoistre ‘know’. |