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Piquant   /pˈikənt/   Listen
Piquant

adjective
1.
Having an agreeably pungent taste.  Synonyms: savory, savoury, spicy, zesty.
2.
Engagingly stimulating or provocative.  Synonym: salty.  "Salty language"
3.
Attracting or delighting.  Synonym: engaging.  "A piquant face with large appealing eyes"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Piquant" Quotes from Famous Books



... plums, because the pudding falls to pieces if you do. In The Way of all Flesh, however, a compere is always present whose business it is to say good things. His perpetual flow of asides is pleasant because the asides are piquant and, in their way, to the point. Butler's mind, being a good mind, had a predilection for the object, and his detestation of the rotunder platitudes of a Greek chorus, if nothing else, had taught him that a corner-man should have something ...
— Aspects of Literature • J. Middleton Murry

... do this with a penurious man than I could with a sulky one. I know but of one fault he had, besides an extreme cautiousness in his writings, and that one was national, a matter of words, and amply overpaid by a stream of conversation, lively, piquant, and liberal, not the less interesting for occasionally betraying an intimacy with pain, and for a high and somewhat strained tone of voice, like a man speaking with suspended breath, and in the habit of subduing his feelings. No man felt more kindly ...
— Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Volume 1, No. 2, July, 1850. • Various

... the woods," she suggested, with a smile which lay strangely on her piquant features. "It will look better than standing like posts ...
— The Desired Woman • Will N. Harben

... was so open, cheerful, hospitable, in the appearance of its smooth, broad avenues and pretty little parks, with the bronze statues which all looked noble—in the moonlight; it was such a combination and piquant contrast of shabby ease and stately elegance —negro cabins and stone mansions, picket-fences and sheds, and flower-banked terraces before rows of residences which bespoke wealth and refinement. The very aspect of the street population was novel; compared to New York, the city was as silent as a ...
— Baddeck and That Sort of Thing • Charles Dudley Warner

... the first time dropped before his. She knew perfectly well what she ought to have done and she was singularly indisposed to do it. It was a most piquant adventure, after all, and it almost helped her to forget the trouble which had been sitting so heavily in her heart. Still avoiding his eyes, ...
— The Zeppelin's Passenger • E. Phillips Oppenheim


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