Elaborate style
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 22 answers to crossword clue "Elaborate style"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
ROCOCOElaborate style
ORNATELYIn elaborate style
ROCOCOElaborate architectural style
ROCOCOElaborate style of architecture.
ARIOSOIn the style of an elaborate melody.
extravagantExcessively elaborate in style, speech, or action
rococo(of or in) an elaborate decorative style of many curves
rococos(of or in) an elaborate decorative style of many curves
overwriteto write in too elaborate, burdensome, diffuse, or prolix a style
dressedArrange or style (one's own or someone else's hair), esp. in an elaborate way
dressesArrange or style (one's own or someone else's hair), esp. in an elaborate way
baroqueof an elaborate style of music, architecture, and art of the 17th and 18 centuries
floweriest(of a style of speech or writing) Full of elaborate or literary words and phrases
flowerier(of a style of speech or writing) Full of elaborate or literary words and phrases
baroquesof an elaborate style of music, architecture, and art of the 17th and 18 centuries
ricercarsAn elaborate instrumental composition in fugal or canonic style, typically of the 16th to 18th centuries
churriguerescoof or relating to a Spanish baroque architectural style characterized by elaborate surface decoration also CHURRIGUERESQUE
ricercariAn elaborate instrumental composition in fugal or canonic style, typically of the 16th to 18th centuries
churrigueresqueof or relating to a Spanish baroque architectural style characterized by elaborate surface decoration also CHURRIGUERESCO
plateresqueof, relating to, or being a 16th century Spanish architectural style characterized by elaborate ornamentation suggestive of silver plate
rocaillesAn 18th-century artistic or architectural style of decoration characterized by elaborate ornamentation with pebbles and shells, typical of grottos and fountains
madrigalsA part-song for several voices, esp. one of the Renaissance period, typically arranged in elaborate counterpoint and without instrumental accompaniment. Originally used of a genre of 14th-century Italian songs, the term now usually refers to English or Italian songs of the late 16th and early 17th c., in a free style strongly influenced by the text