posh

[ US /ˈpɑʃ/ ]
[ UK /pˈɒʃ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. elegant and fashionable
    a classy dame
    classy clothes
    a posh restaurant
    a swish pastry shop on the Rue du Bac
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How To Use posh In A Sentence

  • Laura Wade's Posh, timed to open as the Tories edged into power in May 2010, reminded us just what we were in for: overprivileged hooligans in drinking-society blazers who trash a pub as thoughtlessly as they will trash the country. Dominic Cooke: a life in theatre
  • On Friday, we thought we'd try lunch at the Stag and Hounds in Binfield, but there wasn't a table free, so we'd headed back homewards and went to the poshest place in the village.
  • The crowd is a mix between trendy hotel visitors and posh Londoners.
  • Meanwhile, Angela Brockway and other members of the reading group are struggling to carry on without their friend: There were about 14 of us who all used to sit round her big Victorian table in her conservatory with mugs of tea and coffee and piles of what we called 'posh' biscuits. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph
  • Why do Americans think that the English accents are either really posh or cockney?
  • We meet in a tiny plush room in a posh London hotel which is the regular haunt for such interviews.
  • To get to the lodge he was staying in, Jeff and I had to park at the bottom of a ski slope and ride up on this crazy contraption called a funicular-basically a posh leather bound trolley that slides up the side of a hill. Comments for BrightestYoungThings
  • I've declined the invitation to the Royal Garden Party; I'd just to be a square peg in a round hole among all those posh people.
  • And I can hear the clump clump clump of the three posh post-university flatsharing chums thumping about their flat upstairs, slamming doors, shouting to each other and walking heavy-footed across my dream-flat.
  • The abiding, bred-in-the-bone ignorance of posh people about ordinary people – how we live, think, feel. How to learn to live with Tories
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