Get Free Checker

rose-tinted

ADJECTIVE
  1. of a color tinged with rose

How To Use rose-tinted In A Sentence

  • Sitting in your armchair and looking through rose-tinted glasses you see communism as only about ‘pay workers a fair wage.’
  • Crucially, however, it is not a rose-tinted look at proceedings and isn't flag-waving in the slightest, lending extra credibility to the whole affair - much like his decision to shoot in black and white.
  • Reference to yesterday is nothing but a convenience held dear by writers too lazy to listen with open ears; memories are forever rose-tinted by circumstance, whatever their stand-alone merits.
  • The effect of this is to give the film a curiously sanitised glow, as if it has been shot with the rose-tinted lens of nostalgia.
  • Your feelings for this guy are seen through rose-tinted spectacles. The Sun
  • These may not make a dent in the household budget of what Fearnley-Whittingstall describes as the "bucolic, rose-tinted world" of the River Cottage, but will impact heavily on those struggling in a tough economic climate to feed their families. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • With rose-tinted glasses, anything will look good but then we might also discover the sometimes hidden beauty is all around us.
  • Don't go into the career with rose-tinted spectacles though.
  • The miniseries he produced had a homemade look appropriate both to the sales talents and the antipolitical instincts of its star; its early episodes consisted mostly of Ross Perot talking plain Texas talk about the economy or painting rose-tinted word pictures of himself. The Second Coming
  • We always view the past through rose-tinted glasses. Times, Sunday Times
View all