[
UK
/nˈiːʃ/
]
[ US /ˈnɪtʃ/ ]
[ US /ˈnɪtʃ/ ]
NOUN
- a small concavity
- (ecology) the status of an organism within its environment and community (affecting its survival as a species)
-
a position particularly well suited to the person who occupies it
he found his niche in the academic world - an enclosure that is set back or indented
How To Use niche In A Sentence
- Over the south door, the twelfth-century carving of Christ in Glory is seated in a niche, within the traditional mandorla.
- They recognize that their competencies are an ill match for the requirements of those niches. The Rule of Three
- It is for any manufacturer who produces a cabriolet a niche product.
- I've created a bizarro little niche here where I kind of get to do whatever I want.
- A business that is the wrong size is a business which does not have the right ecological niche to survive and prosper. MANAGEMENT: task, responsibilities, practices
- The statistical analyses and their detailed explication will be most appropriate for researchers who share this particular academic niche.
- Charney is also determined to make a deeper niche within that niche category, by focusing on more fashionable, more fitted basic T-shirts done in 100 percent combed cotton, 30 single yarn baby ribs and superfine jerseys.
- To the west of the church is an open cortile, the ancient burying ground, with fourteen pillars in the wall bearing niches for the Stations of the The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
- With worldwide demand for nuclear skills far outstripping supply, that niche should become steadily more valuable. Times, Sunday Times
- It's a niche product which means that it won't suit everybody; in fact it may not suit most people.