BIZARRE


Meaning of BIZARRE in English

bi ‧ zarre /bəˈzɑː, bɪˈzɑː $ -ˈzɑːr/ BrE AmE adjective

[ Date: 1600-1700 ; Language: French ; Origin: Italian bizzarro 'always changing, unreasonable' , from Spanish bizarro 'brave' , perhaps from Basque bizarra 'beard' ]

very unusual or strange:

a bizarre coincidence

dancers in rather bizarre costumes

—bizarrely adverb

• • •

THESAURUS

■ very strange

▪ weird very strange or very different from what you are used to:

I had a weird dream last night.

|

It’s a weird and wonderful place.

▪ bizarre extremely strange and different from what is usually considered normal:

It was a bizarre situation.

|

Mark’s behaviour was really bizarre.

▪ surreal extremely strange and unconnected with real life or normal experiences, like something out of a dream:

His paintings are full of surreal images.

|

There is something surreal about the climate change talks in Bali.

|

The plant’s flowers were so big that they seemed almost surreal

▪ uncanny very strange – used especially about someone having an unusual ability to do something, or looking surprisingly similar to someone:

She had an uncanny knack (=ability) of putting her finger right on a problem.

|

Alice had an uncanny resemblance to Josie.

|

his uncanny ability to pick racing winners

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.