英:[gæˈmi:n]
美:[ɡæˈmin, ˈɡæmin]
英:[gæˈmi:n]
美:[ɡæˈmin, ˈɡæmin]
"小巧、苗条、活泼的年轻女孩",1899年,源自法语 gamin 的女性形式 gamine。
Noun borrowed from French, feminine derivative of gamin gamin Adjective borrowed from French, derivative of gamin, gamine gamin, gamine >entry 1
The first known use of gamine was in 1848
gamyadjective
brave, plucky
having the flavor of wild game especially when slightly spoiled
gamy meat
gamutnoun
an entire range or series
ran the gamut from rich to poor
gammanoun
the third letter of the Greek alphabet—Γ or γ
gamingnoun
the practice of gambling
the acting out of a situation (as war) for training or testing
the playing of video games
gamyadjective
brave, plucky
having the flavor of wild game especially when slightly spoiled
gamy meat
gaminenoun
an often poor girl who spends much of her time on the streets
a small playfully mischievous girl
1 Williams looked gamine with her signature pixie cut, single necklace, and natural makeup.
2 The ‘gamine fille’ appeared here and there, such as a camisole style dress, go-go shorts, and a grey flannel bralette over a turtleneck paired with a skirt.
3 A gangly gamine with full, heavy features, America’s sweetheart as painted by Modigliani, it was small wonder the city’s stylists all fell for Sevigny.
4 Short and gamine, he name-checks influencer Niamh Adkins as someone who makes the mixie cut look great.
5 The models are all leg and attitude and teasing hem-lines; they had a playful, gamine quality – a freedom.
6 "I think it's interesting that our mayor and his party come from an artistic background," says Arnalds, a slight, gamine woman who is fast becoming the country's most compelling and original singer since Björk.
7 These women found Highsmith’s gamine attractiveness as irresistible as the camera does and her implacable character no less so.
8 The first looks to grace the runway were what might be called “gamine gothic.”
9 a movie about a French gamine
10 When Vogue described Ms. Ziourova, who pursued a degree in Slavic studies at the University College London, as “gamine,” she said, she had to look up the word to make sure it wasn’t an insult.
11 Dark-haired gamine Lauren Edson brought a spry, agile contrast to the mordant sensibility of the piece, while Hartley, in one solo, had some macabre showman's razzle-dazzle.
12 Almost gawkily teenage, her gamine face is hyper-expressive, beaming right to the back rows.
13 Dessay combines a gamey, gamine quality with singing of unstoppable energy and momentum.
14 Here, a Riviera cotton striped A-line dress and canvas satchel explain why Wu calls the whole gamut “gamine chic.”
15 Marilyn Monroe was the sex goddess, Grace Kelly the ice queen, Audrey Hepburn the eternal gamine.
16 In a 1965 shoot for Elle, a gamine model in graphic patterned suit by Dior, leather gloves and fedora is caught in a dramatic arc of light against a mosaic wall.
17 By the late 1970s, the gamine look Ms. York embodied, so popular in Swinging London, had largely passed from favor.
18 Her hourglass figure takes the place of Hepburn’s gamine frame.
19 British actor Carey Mulligan’s soft eyes and fair complexion are typical of a kind of demure gamine who gets typecast as an underestimated heroine.
20 Since it was released in 2007, the scent has become a modern classic associated with gamine girlishness and the whimsical side of the designer’s ready-to-wear.