How to Use foppish in a Sentence

foppish

adjective
  • The coat plus the beard lent a bear-like aspect to his style, which was equally foppish and preppy.
    Vogue, 30 Oct. 2021
  • The generous, foppish satin bows draped floppily across the toes will cheer up even the most lugubrious shoe fetishist.
    Lauren Ingram, WSJ, 7 Dec. 2017
  • To mark the occasion, Lubanski gave Frazee a foppish stuffed bunny with satin, pink paws.
    Brigit Katz, Smithsonian, 9 Mar. 2017
  • To mark the occasion, Lubanski gave Frazee a foppish stuffed bunny with satin, pink paws.
    Brigit Katz, Smithsonian, 9 Mar. 2017
  • Onscreen, the Duke, played by Richard Roxburgh, is a bit of a foppish joke and his attempts to steal Satine are played largely for comedy.
    Suzy Evans, The Hollywood Reporter, 1 July 2019
  • Onstage, the band dressed in the sort of foppish outfits favored by several other white acts of the mid-1960s: knee-high socks, short ties, floppy collars.
    Clay Risen, New York Times, 17 Dec. 2022
  • Onstage, the band dressed in the sort of foppish outfits favored by several other white acts of the mid-1960s: knee-high socks, short ties, floppy collars.
    Clay Risen, BostonGlobe.com, 18 Dec. 2022
  • The gesture seems to carry both a foppish sophistication and a Prussian coldness.
    Austin Grossman, The Atlantic, 13 Oct. 2019
  • Weekday lunches are equally buzzy; stately but relaxed affairs with a mix of MPs, moguls, foppish eccentrics, and women in the latest Roksanda dresses.
    Steven Stolman, Town & Country, 24 Oct. 2016
  • Gwen Loeb is wonderfully funny as a foppish courtier and as rough-mannered country worker Audrey, with whom Touchstone strikes up a romance.
    Sam Hurwitt, The Mercury News, 10 July 2019
  • Moore can lay on Wimsey’s fussy, foppish mannerisms awfully thick as well, like a dandy in an old drawing room comedy rather than a gentleman of true substance.
    Misha Berson, The Seattle Times, 2 June 2017
  • Nearby a half-length painting of Saint Sebastian reimagines its subject as an almost foppish youth with auburn hair and a single arrow piercing his smooth torso.
    Roberta Smith, New York Times, 24 June 2021
  • The protagonist, one Reginald Bunthorne, is a foppish aesthete who’s gained star status but is frustrated in his attempts to win the heart of the titular milkmaid Patience.
    Randy McMullen, The Mercury News, 8 Feb. 2017
  • But gardening isn't just for middle-aged women or foppish 17th-century French kings anymore.
    Geoff Kirsch, Alaska Dispatch News, 29 July 2017
  • For instance, a manly man of 18th-century France would be considered fairly foppish today.
    Jennifer Wright, Harper's BAZAAR, 29 Aug. 2019
  • Teddy’s unpromising fifth cousin—was written off as a rich, foppish lightweight with little more than an aristocratic accent and rich parents.
    Edward Kosner, WSJ, 25 Sep. 2018
  • The plentiful mime is both broad and exact, capable of showing — without sound — how Harlequin’s foppish rival sings poorly.
    Brian Seibert, New York Times, 5 June 2018
  • Her characters are played large – very large in some cases, especially Cal Harris as a deliciously foppish Prince John.
    David Lyman, Cincinnati.com, 29 July 2017
  • Her mother thinks otherwise, and wants to see her daughter marry a foppish wit that panders to her own intellectual pretensions.
    cleveland, 8 July 2022
  • Inside the train, a foppish, gender-bending revolution is brewing.
    Michael Upchurch, The Seattle Times, 4 July 2017
  • The monocle’s first two lives, as foppish accessory and evildoer’s adornment, have persisted into the present.
    Austin Grossman, The Atlantic, 13 Oct. 2019
  • Eventually, foppish men hawking ideas rather than wares would lay the same claim to the American individualist spirit: the adman as noble as the oilman, the programmer no different from the prospector.
    Ian Bogost, The Atlantic, 19 Mar. 2020
  • Making this pronouncement is officious Lord Nooth, the governor of the area's spiffy bronze age town, who's played by Hiddleston like a foppish, money-hungry Roman provincial functionary with a truly eccentric accent.
    Kenneth Turan, latimes.com, 15 Feb. 2018
  • Atkins perfectly catches Spenser’s breezy voice and Parker’s knack for creating vivid characters — notably a foppish, condescending British detective who is also hunting the paintings.
    Adam Woog, The Seattle Times, 17 Apr. 2018
  • As foppish Andrew Aguecheek, Jacob Dresch is particularly funny with his physicality.
    Matthew J. Palm, OrlandoSentinel.com, 8 Mar. 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'foppish.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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