(n.) A showy trifle; a toy; a splendid plaything; a pretty but worthless bauble.
(a.) Showy; unreal; pretentious.
Example Sentences:
(1) Now, with the initial euphoria subsided, the time has come to see just how playable these new gewgaws actually are.
(2) Luckily, George Lucas had the foresight to license his creation to toy companies, so children could harass their parents to buy them officially branded gewgaws.
(3) Consumers who still “aspire” to own something by the brand will theoretically then spend less money on some proportionately even more overpriced gewgaw such as a purse or keyring.
Unreal
Definition:
(a.) Not real; unsubstantial; fanciful; ideal.
Example Sentences:
(1) Maybe it’s all unreal, all the way down, the speeches, the photo opportunities?
(2) She was presented as something superhuman but also unreal, sanitised, infantilised; she was more than just a woman singing a song, she was an Ideal, a Symbol.
(3) Algeria deserved a better fate than an exit which inevitably will leave big regrets that they missed out on something monumental or unreal, but the national team left the Brazilian World Cup with sword in hand and head high.” In Germany most of the media were just thankful they had progressed.
(4) This earlier shadow, this yearning and refracted autobiography, places Ballard at the heart of fiction of the unreal.
(5) Overall, panic symptoms could be grouped into three categories: early symptoms--consisting of dyspnea, palpitations, chest discomfort, and hot flashes; intermediate symptoms--including shaking, choking, feelings of unreality, sweats, faintness, and dizziness; late symptoms-consisting of fear and paresthesias.
(6) It demonstrates a previously unrealized advantage of confocal optical microscopy.
(7) Protein separation has been achieved by electrical field-flow fractionation, a heretofore unrealized separation technique.
(8) And with that she clutches a bejewelled hand to what is famously the most unreal part of her anatomy.
(9) To be racing for the school, feeling unreal, light, weightless, powered by gut fear alone.
(10) It is unbelievable, it is almost unreal that we were able to come together so quickly to craft a compromise that both Democrats and Republicans can find a way to support and move forward,” said Democratic representative John Lewis, of Georgia, who was a leader from the civil rights era.
(11) Faced with this mutant telly genre masquerading as reality, soaps have become unreal just when we needed them to be otherwise.
(12) Although there was an initial tendency on the part of students to regard the exercise as 'unreal', they delighted in refining their communication skills and trying out their skills in problem solving.
(13) In a word: Hollyoaks has become Geordie Shore and The Only Way Is Essex – as unreal as its purported reality show counterparts.
(14) After about 10 days of regular triazolam they tended to develop panics and depression, felt unreal, and sometimes paranoid.
(15) But for too many of our citizens, a different reality exists: mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities; rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation; an education system, flush with cash, but which leaves our young and beautiful students deprived of all knowledge; and the crime and the gangs and the drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential.
(16) The amount of times he’s given the ball away is unreal.
(17) Eight normal subjects were studied in laboratory by the awakening technique, and the dream contents were rated by two judges according to nine scaled dimensions: unreality, participation of the dreamer, pleasantness, unpleasantness, verbal aggresivity, physical aggressivity, sexuality, sensoriality and time of reference in the dreamer's life.
(18) Budding fashion designers will certainly have a lot of potential products to toy with, some of which are so futuristic that they seem almost unreal.
(19) The commission president accused Johnson of painting an unreal picture of the EU for the British public and said he should return to Brussels, where he previously worked as a journalist, to see whether his claims chimed with “reality”.
(20) Computers have unrealized potential in investigation and clinical care.