emblematic
English
Etymology
From French emblématique. See emblem.
Pronunciation
- enPR: ĕmb-lə-mă-tĭk
Adjective
emblematic (comparative more emblematic, superlative most emblematic)
- Serving as, or relating to a symbol, emblem or illustration of a type
- Typical; representative.
- 2015 June 9, “Women’s World Cup 2015: England beaten by France in Group F opener”, in The Guardian (London):
- With Le Sommer withdrawn, France – now with five in midfield – seemed content to hold on for a deceptively narrow win. Such containment tactics can prove high risk but the only threat England could muster was a shot from Aluko which flew high and wide. It seemed entirely emblematic of their afternoon.
- 2019, Oliver Norgrove, Hypnotised by cake and unicorns, the Brexit perfectionists have blown it in the Guardian
- The result of yesterday’s meaningful vote in the House of Commons, much like the first in January, was emblematic of a very striking Brexit reality: that the principle barrier to leaving the EU comes from the very people most desperate to see it happen.
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Synonyms
- (serving as or relating to a symbol): symbolic, illustrative
- (typical): representative, exemplary
Translations
serving as a symbol
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