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fancy
[ fan-see ]
adjective
- ornamental; decorative; not plain:
a cake with a fancy icing.
- tending or intending to impress: fancy four-syllable words.
a fancy degree in geophysics;
fancy four-syllable words.
- complicated or difficult to perform or execute:
a couple doing some fancy footwork on the dance floor.
a fancy conception of time.
- made, designed, grown, adapted, etc., to please the taste or fancy; of superfine quality or exceptional appeal:
fancy goods; fancy fruits.
- bred to develop points of beauty or excellence, as an animal.
- much too costly; exorbitant or extravagant:
a consultant who charges fancy fees.
noun
- imagination or fantasy, especially as exercised in a capricious manner.
- the artistic ability of creating unreal or whimsical imagery, decorative detail, etc., as in poetry or drawing.
- a mental image or conception:
He had happy fancies of being a famous actor.
Synonyms: phantasm, idea, impression, notion, thought
- an idea or opinion with little foundation; illusion:
Her belief that she can sing is a mere fancy.
It was his fancy to fly to Paris occasionally for dinner.
- capricious preference; inclination; a liking:
to take a fancy to walking barefoot in the streets.
- critical judgment; taste.
- the breeding of animals to develop points of beauty or excellence.
- the fancy, Archaic. people deeply interested in a sport, art, etc.
- Obsolete. sexual love.
verb (used with object)
- to form a conception of; picture to oneself:
Fancy living with that egotist all your life!
- to believe without being absolutely sure or certain:
I fancy you are my new neighbor.
- to take a liking to; like:
I really fancy the spotted one in that litter.
- to want or desire:
I fancy another piece of cake.
- to breed to develop a special type of animal.
interjection
- fancy that. (used as an exclamation of mild surprise):
They invited you, too? Fancy!
verb phrase
- to make superficially showy by way of improvement:
an old car fancied up with a bright new paint job.
fancy
/ ˈfænsɪ /
adjective
- not plain; ornamented or decorative
fancy clothes
a fancy cake
- requiring skill to perform; intricate
a fancy dance routine
- arising in the imagination; capricious or illusory
- ( often used ironically ) superior in quality or impressive
a fancy course in business administration
- higher than expected
fancy prices
- (of a domestic animal) bred for particular qualities
noun
- a sudden capricious idea; whim
- a sudden or irrational liking for a person or thing
- the power to conceive and represent decorative and novel imagery, esp in poetry. Fancy was held by Coleridge to be more casual and superficial than imagination See imagination
- an idea or thing produced by this
- a mental image
- taste or judgment, as in art of dress
- Also calledfantasyfantasia music a composition for solo lute, keyboard, etc, current during the 16th and 17th centuries
- the fancy archaic.those who follow a particular sport, esp prize fighting
verb
- to picture in the imagination
- to suppose; imagine
I fancy it will rain
- often used with a negative to like
I don't fancy your chances!
- reflexive to have a high or ill-founded opinion of oneself
he fancied himself as a doctor
- informal.to have a wish for; desire
she fancied some chocolate
- informal.to be physically attracted to (another person)
- to breed (animals) for particular characteristics
interjection
- Alsofancy that! an exclamation of surprise or disbelief
Derived Forms
- ˈfancily, adverb
- ˈfanciness, noun
Other Words From
- fan·ci·ness noun
- un·fan·cy adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of fancy1
Idioms and Phrases
see flight of fancy ; footloose and fancy-free ; take a fancy to ; tickle one's fancy ;.Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But since this is such a massive amount of data, to really do anything too fancy would take months and an eye-watering amount of computer processing to achieve.
But on TV, he plays a successful rich guy because he has all the props, from fancy cars to private jets to a boardroom that was actually a set built for his "reality" TV show.
Did you see “Conclave,” a pulpy entertainment that, because of its fancy trappings, seems smarter than it actually is?
Some victims believed he had property abroad, fancy cars, a log cabin in the Lake District or a caravan near Blackpool.
On my breaks, I would stop by the fancy stores and get super inspired.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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