View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Unfashionable.

Unfashionable

Unfashionable meaning

Not fashionable. | That cannot be fashioned; unshapely, distorted.

Example sentences (20)

Andrew Lloyd Webber Of himself with Humphreys he wrote: “We will no longer part with obscure composers and unfashionable Victorianas.

Combined with a fondness for extended guitar acrobatics, it's a profoundly unfashionable aesthetic which has nevertheless turned the band into one of the more notable success stories of contemporary indie rock.

He was a coach who, after a brief spell with Burnley, took the unfashionable Bournemouth to back-to-back promotions and established it as a Premier League team.

The firm behind Lucky Strike, Dunhill and Rothmans cigarettes, BAT has suffered as smoking has become increasingly unfashionable.

Vuine says that AI was distinctly unfashionable at the time, but when Google purchased AI company Deep Mind in 2014, it showed the team how AI had become more mainstream and was the motivation they needed to push forward.

We've had a couple of great sponsors lately, but in the South Wales valleys it's unfashionable.

What gives "True Detective" season 2 its lasting power is the unfashionable emphasis it puts on the sacrifice inherent to fatherhood.

At the time, retro games were still considered unfashionable and Ikeda was able to pick them up for a price within his limited budget.

My Cousin’s New Wife Is So Unfashionable.

They puff out their chests, and begin their speeches with “Unfashionable though it may be to say so…”, as if expecting applause for their bravery.

You publish several books by a writer who is these days thought rather unfashionable.

Poet Sally Goldsmith, a member of Stag in Dore and Totley, on the fringes of the Peak District, says it might be “an unfashionable thing to say”, but it’s about beauty.

Taylor said just as an electric or telephone company can't refuse to do business with someone because of his or her views, social media companies shouldn't have the right to censor anyone with "unfashionable or controversial" opinions.

This opened up a space for artists of colour, but it was also a time when it became unfashionable to mention race at all; when success meant assimilation, and being congratulated for not seeming black or Asian was an actual thing.

However, interest in metaphysics – the philosophical investigation of the nature of the universe and existence – had become unfashionable by the time Whitehead began writing in earnest about it in the 1920s.

It has a more neutral flavor than pure or virgin olive oil, making it unfashionable among connoisseurs; however, it has the same fat composition as regular olive oil, giving it the same health benefits.

Jonh Wilde Melody Maker, 28 October 1989 The band's unfashionable reputation and image problem has often been mentioned in the media, even in otherwise positive reviews.

On 8 June, Rousseau and Therese left Lyon for Paris; they reached Paris on 24 June. citation citation In Paris, Rousseau and Therese lodged in an unfashionable neighborhood of the city, the Rue Platrière—now called the Rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

The British geologist Arthur Holmes championed the theory of continental drift at a time when it was deeply unfashionable.

The opera was performed by the Canadian Opera Company at the Hummingbird Centre in Toronto, in April, 1999, several years after Davies' death. citation Davies was a fine public speaker—deft, often humorous, and unafraid to be unfashionable.