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tour de force
[ toor duh fawrs, -fohrs; French toor duh fawrs ]
noun
- an exceptional achievement by an artist, author, or the like, that is unlikely to be equaled by that person or anyone else; stroke of genius:
Herman Melville's Moby Dick was a tour de force.
- a particularly adroit maneuver or technique in handling a difficult situation:
The way the president got his bill through the Senate was a tour de force.
- a feat requiring unusual strength, skill, or ingenuity.
tour de force
/ ˈtʊə də ˈfɔːs; tur də fɔrs /
noun
- a masterly or brilliant stroke, creation, effect, or accomplishment
tour de force
- A feat accomplished through great skill and ability: “The speech was a tour de force; it swept the audience off its feet.”
Word History and Origins
Origin of tour de force1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tour de force1
Example Sentences
His family memoir, Sweet and Low, is a tour de force of reporting and memory—tender, curious, and exceptionally funny.
It is a tour de force of reporting: 13,000 words on a two-week deadline.
It's also a masterpiece of choreographed c--tery—Joffrey's final tour de force.
And, of course, she's best known for her ball-busting tour de force as Ed Helms's wife in The Hangover.
As a result, his version is a technical tour de force but a movie that never gets under your skin.
As a tour de force in the gentle art of lying, the snake-story is justly esteemed.
As a tour de force of geometrical imagination it would be difficult to parallel this hypothesis.
The physical tour de force, was one of those feats of agility in which Neb had been my instructor, ten years before.
If the Mastersingers was a little less successful as a work of art we should still have to regard it as an amazing tour de force.
The music for such incidents cannot be of the highest beauty; here we have one of the cases of a tour de force.
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