clashy-clashy
English
Adjective
clashy-clashy (comparative more clashy-clashy, superlative most clashy-clashy)
- (informal, of clothes, upholstery, etc.) Featuring discordant colours or patterns.
- 2008, Lisa Papademetriou, Accidentally Fabulous, Scholastic, →ISBN, page 2:
- "You could have borrowed one of Dad's ties," I pointed out.
"Dad only has striped ties," Kirk said. "I've only got striped shirts. I'm not about to get all clashy-clashy at some fancy party."
- 2009 August 3, Caitlin Moran, “Forget pushy parents, the less you encourage your children the better”, in The Times, UK:
- Nor getting everyone’s “colours” done, so that the high streets won’t be so “clashy-clashy,” and constantly distressing to the more aesthetically sensitive.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:clashy-clashy.
Antonyms
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