[ US /ˈmɪʃˌmæʃ/ ]
[ UK /mˈɪʃmæʃ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a motley assortment of things
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How To Use mishmash In A Sentence

  • The story of the dream itself was a mishmash of recent events.
  • She pushed through the door and past the dark mahogany bar, her eyes trailing over the mad mishmash of mirrors and chandeliers, the wood-panelled walls bedecked with mottled old Chinese prints, the crazed fruit plasterwork on the ceiling. The Priest
  • The House on the Rock is an architectural mishmash, patched together, built into the rock in places and teetering way out over it in another.
  • But a simpler, more robust fighting game would have been preferable to this mishmash of styles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The busy layered paintings, a mishmash of pattern and photorealism in every colour under the sun, look like computer-age psychedelia. Times, Sunday Times
  • Can he replicate elaborate shapes or does he tend to make a mishmash?
  • ‘Where is the Line’ is a mishmash of ideas, sounding like a fight between a choir and a rack of effects boxes, with neither winning.
  • Next to the mishmash of blackened dahlias, nicotiana rose staunchly and the roses that had been buds the day before were unfurling.
  • The game then degenerated into a real mishmash of misplaced passes and precious few chances.
  • The documentary itself is an awkward mishmash of styles. Times, Sunday Times
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