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Crossword clues for picturesque

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
picturesque
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
picturesque (=pretty)
▪ Would you prefer to live in a modern house or a picturesque cottage?
pretty/picturesque
▪ There are many pretty villages nearby.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
most
▪ TomáÜská is a most picturesque street lined with houses of Renaissance origin with Baroque façades.
▪ There we are in one of the most picturesque beauty spots on the planet.
▪ It is undoubtedly one of the most picturesque and idyllically situated working sites in the county, if not the country.
▪ The most picturesque approach to Kyburg castle is through the Eschenberg forest, past the Bruderhaus deer park.
▪ This is a small historical town of narrow winding streets set amidst some of the most picturesque scenery.
▪ Houshold rubbish and builders waste strewn around some of the most picturesque parts of the forest.
■ NOUN
village
▪ Craigendarroch is the perfect base for discovering the surrounding countryside with its bustling towns, and picturesque villages.
▪ There is also a very pretty walk here, along the old railway line to another picturesque village, Little Melford.
▪ Goblin Ha'Hotel Charming inn situated in picturesque village at the foot of the Lammermuirs.
▪ Once the thriving port of Linlithgow, Blackness is a picturesque village with a heavily fortified castle.
▪ In those days it was a picturesque village a couple of miles from the pleasant and compact town.
▪ Inland, picturesque villages nestle in the wooded Brendon Hills.
▪ It was mid-autumn, and the bulk of the tourists who thronged through the picturesque villages in the summer had gone.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Gordon's picturesque account of the battle
▪ He rents a small house in the picturesque old quarter of town.
▪ the picturesque town of Monterey
▪ We visited the picturesque fishing village of Lochinver.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A picturesque spot with well laid out gardens and leisure centre.
▪ At the time, Dorset was beginning the transition from picturesque dairy country to affluent summer artist colony.
▪ Conwy Town is a picturesque and richly historic touring centre.
▪ It has no regional or picturesque name.
▪ It is undoubtedly one of the most picturesque and idyllically situated working sites in the county, if not the country.
▪ Under a pear tree in the far comer of the orchard was a picturesque timber built shed.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
picturesque

colorful \colorful\ adj.

  1. having striking color. Opposite of colorless.

    Note: [Narrower terms: changeable, chatoyant, iridescent, shot; deep, rich; flaming; fluorescent, glowing; prismatic; psychedelic; red, ruddy, flushed, empurpled]

    Syn: colourful.

  2. striking in variety and interest. Opposite of colorless or dull. [Narrower terms: brave, fine, gay, glorious; flamboyant, resplendent, unrestrained; flashy, gaudy, jazzy, showy, snazzy, sporty; picturesque]

  3. having color or a certain color; not black, white or grey; as, colored crepe paper. Opposite of colorless and monochrome.

    Note: [Narrower terms: tinted; touched, tinged; amber, brownish-yellow, yellow-brown; amethyst; auburn, reddish-brown; aureate, gilded, gilt, gold, golden; azure, cerulean, sky-blue, bright blue; bicolor, bicolour, bicolored, bicoloured, bichrome; blue, bluish, light-blue, dark-blue; blushful, blush-colored, rosy; bottle-green; bronze, bronzy; brown, brownish, dark-brown; buff; canary, canary-yellow; caramel, caramel brown; carnation; chartreuse; chestnut; dun; earth-colored, earthlike; fuscous; green, greenish, light-green, dark-green; jade, jade-green; khaki; lavender, lilac; mauve; moss green, mosstone; motley, multicolor, culticolour, multicolored, multicoloured, painted, particolored, particoloured, piebald, pied, varicolored, varicoloured; mousy, mouse-colored; ocher, ochre; olive-brown; olive-drab; olive; orange, orangish; peacock-blue; pink, pinkish; purple, violet, purplish; red, blood-red, carmine, cerise, cherry, cherry-red, crimson, ruby, ruby-red, scarlet; red, reddish; rose, roseate; rose-red; rust, rusty, rust-colored; snuff, snuff-brown, snuff-color, snuff-colour, snuff-colored, snuff-coloured, mummy-brown, chukker-brown; sorrel, brownish-orange; stone, stone-gray; straw-color, straw-colored, straw-coloured; tan; tangerine; tawny; ultramarine; umber; vermilion, vermillion, cinibar, Chinese-red; yellow, yellowish; yellow-green; avocado; bay; beige; blae bluish-black or gray-blue); coral; creamy; cress green, cresson, watercress; hazel; honey, honey-colored; hued(postnominal); magenta; maroon; pea-green; russet; sage, sage-green; sea-green] [Also See: chromatic, colored, dark, light.]

    Syn: colored, coloured, in color(predicate).

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
picturesque

1703, on pattern of French pittoresque, a loan-word from Italian pittoresco, literally "pictorial" (1660s), from pittore "painter," from Latin pictorem (nominative pictor); see painter (n.1). As a noun from 1749. Related: Picturesquely; picturesqueness.

Wiktionary
picturesque

a. Resembling or worthy of a picture or painting; having the qualities of a picture or painting. scenic

WordNet
picturesque
  1. adj. suggesting or suitable for a picture; pretty as a picture; "a picturesque village"

  2. strikingly expressive; "a picturesque description of the rainforest"

Wikipedia
Picturesque

The term “picturesque” needs to be understood in relationship to two other aesthetic ideals: the beautiful and the sublime. By the last third of the 18th century, Enlightenment and rationalist ideas about aesthetics were being challenged by looking at the experiences of beauty and sublimity as being non-rational. Aesthetic experience was not just a rational decision – one did not look at a pleasing curved form and decide it was beautiful; rather it came naturally as a matter of basic human instinct. Edmund Burke in his 1757 Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful argued that the soft gentle curves appealed to the male sexual desire, while the sublime horrors appealed to our desires for self-preservation. Picturesque arose as a mediator between these opposed ideals of beauty and the sublime, showing the possibilities that existed in between these two rationally idealised states. As Thomas Gray wrote in 1765 of the Scottish Highlands: “The mountains are ecstatic […]. None but those monstrous creatures of God know how to join so much beauty with so much horror.” See also Gilpin and the picturesque.

Usage examples of "picturesque".

A grounded bird, and a grounded bird man, stuck in picturesque Luanda, Angola, by circumstances beyond their control, when they both would much rather have been in Philadelphia, where he had grown up, where his parents lived, and where one could be reasonably sure that 999 out of a thousand good-looking women did not have AIDS, which could not be said of Luanda, Angola.

I have seen the goats on Mount Pentelicus scatter at the approach of a stranger, climb to the sharp points of projecting rocks, and attitudinize in the most self-conscious manner, striking at once those picturesque postures against the sky with which Oriental pictures have made us and them familiar.

A mile and a half from town, I came to a grove of tall cocoanut trees, with clean, branchless stems reaching straight up sixty or seventy feet and topped with a spray of green foliage sheltering clusters of cocoanuts--not more picturesque than a forest of collossal ragged parasols, with bunches of magnified grapes under them, would be.

Miles had expected a noisy, raucous spacer-town, but Melos was nearly silent, and rather picturesque in the cool evening.

State balls of the time, with that most graceful and picturesque of all dances, the Menuet de la Cour, which, brought over from France during the reign of Louis XIII.

The abode of the Misses Tripp turned out to be a picturesque cottageso extremely old-world and picturesque that it looked as though it might collapse any minute.

The countryside around Pennistone Royal looked particularly picturesque.

Blackburied: The meaning of this is not very clear, but it is probably a periphrastic and picturesque way of indicating damnation.

The pictures of the Great White Way of New York, Piccadilly Circus, the Grands Boulevards of Paris and so forth, with their polychromatic visual clamour, still strike us as distractingly picturesque.

The hedges near Treby, like those round Dawlish and Torquay, are redolent with a thousand flowers: the neighbouring fields are prankt with all the colours of Flora,--its soft air,--the picturesque bay in which it stood, as it were, enshrined,--its red cliffs, and verdure reaching to the very verge of the tide,--all breathe the same festive and genial atmosphere.

Commend us to one picturesque, garrulous old fellow, like Froissart, or Philip de Comines, or Bishop Burnet, before all the philosophic prosers that ever prosed.

Paris quays, studying their busy life and their picturesque vistas, whenever he was not poring over the second-hand books set out for sale upon their parapets.

In swift and picturesque sequence the personages of the Masque pass before us.

The water seeks out all the low places, and ramifies the interior, running away into lovely bays and lagoons, leaving slender tongues of land and picturesque islands, and bringing into the recesses of the land, to the remote country farms and settlements, the flavor of salt, and the fish and mollusks of the briny sea.

She had never met her before, because Polla hated to leave her beloved Reate in the picturesque Sabine hill country, and she cordially disliked Rome.