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[ UK /fæɹˈe‍ɪɡə‍ʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a motley assortment of things

How To Use farrago In A Sentence

  • I therefore have no idea whether Captain Dinwiddie is one of the supreme works of American literature or a pretentious farrago. TROPIC OF NIGHT
  • The film is a farrago of trite emotions, one-note acting and embarrassing lines.
  • If I'm going to talk about the whole farrago, perhaps it would be best to start by going back to the original report.
  • His story was such a fantastic farrago of lies and fantasies that it was thrown out by the Scottish judges.
  • And anyway, by the late ’70s, Mr. Hockney had detoured in a half-dozen directions: theater sets and costume design, where the artist showed himself to be a virtuoso; photography, where he did not; and farragoes into Cubist collage, Chinese philosophy and “fax” drawings, as well as the artist’s crazily overpublicized theory that from the Renaissance onward, artists used optical devices to paint in perfect one-point perspective. The Unconfounding Delight of David Hockney
  • This farrago of nonsense requires a very high standard of stylised comedy acting, which is not in vogue in the 21st Century.
  • As far as I can tell, it is a farrago of conspiracy theories.
  • It may, for all I know, be a farrago of nonsense from beginning to end, but the authors appear to believe that they are dealing in fact.
  • After enduring this witless farrago devoid of a single real human emotion and yet somehow scarily, snarkily representative of a generation, some of us may simply want to weep for the future.
  • The debt-ceiling farrago showed that old-fashioned bargaining could still work, and both Mr Obama and Mr Boehner showed themselves open to a grand bargain, if only for a time.
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