faddish

[ US /ˈfædɪʃ/ ]
[ UK /fˈædɪʃ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. intensely fashionable for a short time
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How To Use faddish In A Sentence

  • He once had a faddish private client who insisted on egg-white omelettes, to be cooked without butter or oil in the pan.
  • The pejorative word faddish an simply be a negative way of saying “current” or “in touch.” Navigating the Winds of Change
  • We are not a people beholden to faddish diets, hung up on tofu, soya, sushi or colon-cleansers.
  • One hopes that whoever wins next week will quickly dismiss all this faddish declinism.
  • He was an original pioneer into the dark frontier of chaos before it gelled into a scientific theory and faddish field of study.
  • This is because I'm flighty and align myself constantly with faddish moral causes.
  • Adult attention deficit disorder is quickly becoming the new gay "wastebasket," or faddish diagnosis some doctors and patients are clinging to in an effort to keep up with our 24-7 culture. Advocate.com Daily News
  • Some analysts fear it might still be overexposed to the faddish and underperforming technology sector.
  • There was, they felt, “a certain snobbish and faddish ‘interest’ in Negroes.” White America Reacts
  • The strong appetite for a piece of Ireland was often shallow, faddish and dishonest.
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