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Definitions

arabesque

[ar-uh-besk] / ˌær əˈbɛsk /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

As incised on an 8th century limestone plaque from Mexico, he’s an arabesque tangle of swelling clouds and aqueous swirls.

From New York Times

He gave Schrader’s “The Comfort of Strangers,” a 1990 drama about a young couple who encounter a mysterious Christopher Walken in Venice, an exotic score swelling from arabesques to full-blown opera.

From Washington Post

An arabesque performed with a wind-milling arm contrasts with the looseness of his collapsing spine.

From New York Times

At times, plunging into a penché or rotating in an arabesque, she seems like the prototypical ballerina against which more skewed, less classical movement defines itself.

From New York Times

Their blades made a delicious crackling sound as they sliced into the ice, sinking into deep edges, gliding into graceful arabesques, moving impossibly quickly.

From Seattle Times