exoticism
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]exoticism (usually uncountable, plural exoticisms)
- (uncountable) The state of being exotic.
- 2004 January 25, Mark Feeney, “A piece of Asia's past, in living color”, in The Boston Globe[1]:
- For all the exoticism of the images, they possess a phenomenal immediacy and even contemporaneity.
- Something exotic.
- 1985 February 14, Jane Nickerson, “Chinese New Year”, in The Ledger[2]:
- Chinese restaurants, now dotting this peninsula like azaleas at Cypress Gardens, have introduced thousands of us Occidentals to the delights of moo goo gai pan. As a result, attempts to produce such exoticisms in our own homes have multiplied.
- 2000 July 20, Bernard Holland, “LINCOLN CENTER FESTIVAL REVIEW; Messiaen's Nature Worship Calls on Bird Song and Faith”, in The New York Times[3]:
- The distribution of instruments is fairly traditional, but with piccolo trumpet and bass trombone to explore extremes, and bells, gongs and tam-tams to variegate the sound. Such exoticisms as the xylorimba (Richard Fitz) and glockenspiel (Jeffrey Milarsky) are introduced along with the sounds of shifting sand.
Usage notes
[edit]Much more common than synonyms exoticness and exoticity.[1]
Synonyms
[edit]- (state of being exotic): exoticness, exoticity, exotism
Translations
[edit]the state of being exotic
|
something exotic