[
UK
/ʌnfˈæʃənəbli/
]
ADVERB
-
in an unfashionable manner
she seemed to make a point of being unfashionably dressed
How To Use unfashionably In A Sentence
- Her skirts appeared unfashionably full, thanks to the numerous petticoats she was wearing.
- She is, in short, a woman of contradictions, and refreshingly, unfashionably unrighteous.
- Emma Watson, who has been brought up by a well-to-do aunt, returns to her family, who live unfashionably in genteel poverty in a Surrey village.
- she seemed to make a point of being unfashionably dressed
- This newspaper offers an unfashionably optimistic answer.
- It's a language created by the right, and now frequently circulated by the left as they hasten to endear themselves to middle Australia by dissociating themselves from the unfashionably socially concerned.
- It may sound unfashionably Corinthian but sport's best lesson to young people is control and grace under duress.
- And like Harry, I believe - unfashionably enough - that a strong and democratic labor movement can help make the world a better place for many more people than it is now.
- A brilliantly clever, decent, hard-working woman is forced to apologise to the public for dressing unfashionably.
- The next sonnets, 127-52, are known as the 'Dark Lady' group, addressed to or concerned with an unfashionably dark-haired, dark-eyed, and dark-complexioned mistress.