i Register
In some senses, mandarin is marked as derogatory, informal, historical, British. Watch for register when choosing this word.
ADJ.
able, alone, arabic, british, english, grand, hard, high
VERB + MANDARIN
can't, cannot, doesn't, improve, isn't, progress, speak, speaking
MANDARIN + NOUN
cantonese, impassivity, it's, loanwords, shanghainese
PREP.
in, in, with, with
ADV.
such
noun
A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire.
LIKE THE MANDARINS of old, the rulers of China live behind high walls. When they emerge, which they rarely do, they travel in cars with rear windows curtained like sedan chairs. They live in the Chung Nan Hai, a walled park adjacent to the Forbidden City from where ancient dynasties ruled the Celestial Empire.
A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat.
A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles.
Its sting preserved to literature a fierce peculiar genius [Waugh] who, in the 40 years before his death last week at 62, achieved recognition as the grand old mandarin of modern British prose and as a satirist whose skill at sticking pens in people rates him a roomy cell in the murderers’ row (Swift, Pope, Wilde, Shaw) of English letters.
When mandarins on the court pointed to obscure language in the Constitution to overturn a century of precedent and declare the income tax unconstitutional, Harlan sided with precedent[.]
Ellipsis of mandarin duck.
A senior civil servant.
adj
Pertaining to or reminiscent of mandarins; deliberately superior or complex; esoteric, highbrow, obscurantist.
A mandarin impassivity had descended over Smiley's face. The earlier emotion was quite gone.
[Anatole] Broyard's columns were suffused with both worldliness and high culture. Wry, mandarin, even self-amused at times, he wrote like a man about town, but one who just happened to have all of Western literature at his fingertips.
noun
Ellipsis of mandarin orange:
Ellipsis of mandarin orange:
An orange colour.
LIKE THE MANDARINS of old, the rulers of China live behind high walls. When they emerge, which they rarely do, they travel in cars with rear windows curtained like sedan chairs. They live in the Chung
WiktionaryIts sting preserved to literature a fierce peculiar genius [Waugh] who, in the 40 years before his death last week at 62, achieved recognition as the grand old mandarin of modern British prose and as
WiktionaryWhen mandarins on the court pointed to obscure language in the Constitution to overturn a century of precedent and declare the income tax unconstitutional, Harlan sided with precedent[.]
WiktionaryA mandarin impassivity had descended over Smiley's face. The earlier emotion was quite gone.
Wiktionary[Anatole] Broyard's columns were suffused with both worldliness and high culture. Wry, mandarin, even self-amused at times, he wrote like a man about town, but one who just happened to have all of Wes
WiktionaryThough alert to riddles' strong roots in vernacular narrative, Cook's tastes are mandarin, and she gives a loving account of Wallace Stevens's meditations on the life of poetic images and simile […].
Wiktionaryi Register
In some senses, mandarin is marked as derogatory, informal, historical, British. Watch for register when choosing this word.