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old fashioned
1noun
(sometimes initial capital letters), a cocktail made with whiskey, bitters, water, and sugar, and garnished with citrus-fruit slices and a cherry.
old-fashioned
2[ohld-fash-uhnd]
old-fashioned
adjective
belonging to, characteristic of, or favoured by former times; outdated
old-fashioned ideas
favouring or adopting the dress, manners, fashions, etc, of a former time
quizzically doubtful or disapproving
she did not reply, but gave him an old-fashioned look
dialect, old for one's age
an old-fashioned child
noun
a cocktail containing spirit, bitters, fruit, etc
Other Word Forms
- old-fashionedly adverb
- old-fashionedness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of old fashioned1
Origin of old fashioned2
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
There is some concern within government that finding a buyer for British Steel may be more difficult, given the site uses old-fashioned blast furnaces.
Department stores, antiques shops and an old-fashioned soda fountain visited by generations have come and gone from the city’s historic core, but the park and its electric tile fountain have endured.
“Tonight, it was more of an old-fashioned recipe.”
"Sheffield is known as the biggest village in world; everybody knows each other. The old-fashioned mentality still appears and it affects everybody, whether you're a football fan or not."
Don't expect many Alexander-Arnold-like adventures into central midfield - but do expect some good, old-fashioned overlapping runs.
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