英:[lu:ʃ]
美:[luʃ]
英:[lu:ʃ]
美:[luʃ]
adjective
of questionable decency, morality, or taste; shady; disreputable.Massage parlors, strip clubs, and other rather louche businesses have moved into the neighborhood recently.
"可疑的,不名誉的",1819年,源自法语 louche "斜视",来自古法语 lousche, lois(12世纪)"斜视的,斜眼的,歪斜的",源自拉丁语 lusca, luscus 的女性形式,意为"一只眼睛瞎的,独眼的",源自原始意大利语 *luk-sko- "视力不全的,视觉障碍的",源自原始印欧语 *luk- "看"或 *leuk- "光" [de Vaan]。
French, literally, cross-eyed, squint-eyed, from Latin luscus blind in one eye
The first known use of louche was in 1819
1 By photographing Simon full-faced but shadowed, serious and pulsing with importance, Gassian rejects the rougher, often louche images he’s created of other rock icons.
2 Rachel Lumberg, as Yvonne's louche sister, also adds to the show's gaiety with her anatomical exploration of the idea that "sex is like a safari park".
3 But in the company of the irrepressible Iggy and surrounded by the louche attractions of West Berlin, it was never going to be a monastic existence.
4 The exhibition is designed to compare and contrast the portly and bourgeois Vuitton with the skinny and louche Mr. Jacobs.
5 Other rock singers try to sound louche, but this one could be under sedation.
6 Sold at Saks since 1952, the distinctive black bar, a louche, luxurious cousin to Ivory, promises to remove impurities and exfoliate the skin while hydrating it.
7 But she was not referring to jean cloth — except when it was intricately decorated with Moroccan beading, in a reference to the louche and luxurious lifestyle of Paul Getty in the 1970s.
8 Photograph: Gary Calton Sébastien Tellier is perhaps the archetypal French pop star: louche yet naive, sensitive yet flippant, proud of his French heritage but determined to sing mostly in English to reach a wider audience.
9 The same playfully louche theme carries through to his master bedroom, where a large doorless shower with transparent glass walls occupies the center of the room.
10 She will face stiff competition in the United States, already a market saturated with choices when it comes to high-thread-count bed linens, fluffy towels and louche yet chic loungewear options.
11 And true to form for the New Group, which is always precise in its nostalgie de la boue, the production has been designed with a perfectionist’s eye for louche period detail.
12 But there’s also something off, even a bit sardonic, about the juxtaposition of Laura, a mousy little blur, and this particular song, with its louche, emphatically unromantic world-weariness.
13 Kothey momo are steamed and fried, the best of both worlds, bottoms browned and crisped while the tops stay baggy and louche.
14 His “Market Street Cinema” series offers shadowy glimpses of lingerie-clad strippers primping or striking louche poses backstage.
15 Crystal and her partner Grace seem very well matched – both have louche indie kid energy.
16 “He’s using its illustrious and louche past to forward it into the future.”
17 Art Basel Miami Beach drew to a close on Sunday and a louche state of relative calm has returned to South Beach.
18 There’s a photo of him as the louche George Berger, with a handlebar mustache and his “hair like Jesus wore it.”
19 The term “mad men” has become an adjective, a shorthand way to describe things that are louche, elegant and dissipated in an antediluvian way.
20 Noah & the Whale's louche 1980s radio rock was the perfect balm as Friday got off to a sunny start, even if headliner Tom Petty might have assumed they had been formed specifically in his honour.