[
UK
/ɡˈæmʌt/
]
[ US /ˈɡæmət/ ]
[ US /ˈɡæmət/ ]
NOUN
-
a complete extent or range:
a face that expressed a gamut of emotions - the entire scale of musical notes
How To Use gamut In A Sentence
- In the evening, the menu takes on more of a bistro persona, with a la carte offerings spanning the gamut from burgers, roast chicken and baked fish to tasty "chasseur" hotpots of mussels steamed in wine (moules marinieres this would be called in France). News On Japan
- The resulting maladies nut the gamut from food allergies to migraines, fibromyalgia, lupus, arthritis and so on.
- College life opened up a whole gamut of new experiences.
- She also recommends researching the publishers who would be suitable, since publishing houses run the whole gamut from highly specialized to general houses to the academic university presses.
- As the story unfolded throughout the past week, I experienced the gamut of emotions: shock, anger, sadness, disgust, confusion.
- In fact, the full gamut. Times, Sunday Times
- This show, held in cavernous, candelabra-strewn space that had a whiff of ruined empire, had plenty of strong, practical pieces: impeccably cut overcoats, running the gamut from deepest navy and ashiest gray to the purest white with black trimming; three-piece suits tailored with Browne's signature off-kilter proportions, and a pair of gray corduroy pants strewn with white snowflakes. Esquire.com Article Feed
- Food-wise you can order Thai green curries or braised shank of lamb while the drinks, though pricey, run the gamut from fine cognacs and whiskeys to classic Martinis and shots.
- The presence of a vast human population on these mountains threw up a gamut of socio-economic issues.
- I've covered the gamut, which makes the role interesting. Times, Sunday Times