What's the difference between metrosexual and unisex?

Metrosexual


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) And so, from "stylish metrosexual" Warne we move seamlessly to Piers Morgan.
  • (2) But when I saw photos of Shane on his way to play golf looking like a model from a 50s catalogue, and when I saw that he'd been described by the Daily Mail as "a smartly dressed metrosexual" – a phrase as ominous from the Daily Mail as "brutally honest" or "plain speaking" – I knew my help was needed.
  • (3) He has pointed to the rise of the "metrosexual male", with David Beckham as its standard bearer, as evidence that masculinity is becoming unfashionable and "traditional male values, such as courage, risk-taking and singlemindedness can be seen as dysfunctional".
  • (4) Meanwhile, and a propos of nothing, a word on the The Last Taboo : Loaf around London or any major city in these metrosexual times and it won't be long before you see men doing things that would have outraged, or at least baffled, their forefathers.
  • (5) He is not just a Notting Hill metrosexual: he also hails from that home counties green Tory tradition that first gave us an Environment Department under the Heath government.
  • (6) He mended his own clothes and, like today's metrosexual, did his share of the housework.
  • (7) The metrosexual threw caution to the wind and started carrying his moisturiser round in his manbag; the lumbersexual now serves us up a hypermasculine aesthetic with an unashamedly ironic grin.
  • (8) Photograph: HBO Feilding: The detective work between Patrick and Kevin shows just how awkward and difficult it can be in this post-gay metrosexual world to determine if a guy is gay or straight.
  • (9) Perhaps you are expecting the standard American complaints against football: calling it futball , the frantic running, players crying (everyone knows there's no crying in baseball), the aggressive metrosexuality, the low scores, France's participation and, of course, games that simply end in ties.
  • (10) Heartthrobs are called heartthrobs for a reason Ryan Gosling’s best actor speech saw peak metrosexual pin-up this year: losing nominees Ryan Reynolds and Andrew Garfield shared a snog, while Gosling further confirmed his dreaminess at the podium.
  • (11) Though there have been many rumblings about the rise of men's style before – particularly during the 1990s, when the term metrosexual gained traction – current trends suggest something more substantial.
  • (12) ‘Mincing’ down the runway Facebook Twitter Pinterest Though Key said he enjoyed getting in touch with his “metrosexual side” at the time , he later admitted his cringeworthy catwalk display of rugby World Cup merchandise was “probably a bit stupid”.
  • (13) A " West Coast metrosexual ", said our state's own land commissioner. "
  • (14) Not about skinning kangaroos for elegant metrosexual accessories.
  • (15) "I think [David] Beckham's important in all of this, because he's so gay-friendly, he is metrosexual – if one of his boys was gay, it's no big deal.
  • (16) There's his gentleness, too: the new man, the metrosexual, the doting dad.
  • (17) Metrosexuality was refreshing because it came at a time when men were struggling to be identified solely by their ability to change a spare tyre, assemble flat-pack furniture or drink a pint of Guinness without the overwhelming urge to be sick in a bush.
  • (18) Johnston said: "Metrosexuality was more to do with an attitude.
  • (19) Instead, this so-called reaction to the unashamedly feminine metrosexual seems to me all about playing with gender stereotypes.

Unisex


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Doumar, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, ruled that Gloucester high school could force Grimm to use unisex bathrooms because Title IX “allows schools to maintain separate bathrooms based on sex as long as the bathrooms for each sex are comparable”, he wrote.
  • (2) Animals, transport and building-simulation were unisex, and if you really wanted to test the limits of female objectification, you could get a severed head with retractable hair.
  • (3) When identical (unisex) BMI cutpoints were used, results were the same; (RR = 2.4, P less than 0.05 for men; RR = 3.1, P less than 0.01 for women).
  • (4) At the start of his junior year, the school forced him to use standalone unisex bathrooms installed specifically for him .
  • (5) The appropriate physical assessment and anticipatory counseling relative to competitive sports, the age mix and the appropriateness of mixed sex and unisex participation are reviewed.
  • (6) In many newspapers, the checks and balances on owners and executives are weak – readers identify with their papers so strongly that, for instance, even Friday's publication of 12 pages of yellow journalism about obscure do-gooders who use unisex loos will not be enough to dent the Mail's sales.
  • (7) Vic Goddard washes his hands in Passmores' open-plan unisex toilet facilities.
  • (8) With the T-shirts, Hamnett showed padded white silk decontamination suits, generously cut, beautifully detailed parkas and trench coats, cropped jackets in heavy cotton, skirts that were straight and short or long, narrow and flared from round about knee level, unisex baggy slept-in trouser suits in dark denim.
  • (9) The primary sources of inconsistency are variation in the prevalence of heartworm infection among populations of dogs and the sensitivity of immunodiagnostic tests to various categories of heartworm infections (ie, patent, immune-mediated occult, unisex occult, and immature occult).
  • (10) He became editor in 2000 when Heat was struggling immediately after its launch and reinvented it as a unisex entertainment title and women's celebrity weekly that became a publishing sensation.
  • (11) Mixed sex twins tended to be lighter than unisex twins.
  • (12) Fundamental assumptions of the model are (1) that data treated in unisex fashion have the normal distribution required of Z-type statistics throughout the period of growth, and (2) that it is reasonable to consider anthropometric measurements in all populations (regardless of ultimate size) as growing toward the common height chosen for the phantom.
  • (13) These data indicate that unisex and sex-specific cutpoints for BMI identify the same sex-specific patterns of association between obesity and risk of NIDDM.
  • (14) A spokesperson for Next said its toy range, some of which was labelled "boys' stuff", had this year been branded under one unisex title, The Little Gift Co. "Our packaging designs, labelling and in-store signage was intended to help customers choose appropriate gifts last year; however, we realise that these classifications could be misleading," said the spokesperson.
  • (15) It's essentially unisex: the women's suits are simply men's in smaller sizes.
  • (16) Paoletti writes that during the heyday of unisex parenting, which lasted from 1965 to 1985, "pink was so strongly associated with traditional femininity that it was vehemently rejected by feminist parents for their daughters' clothing.
  • (17) They won’t even consider it a problem, lest it hamper the future careers of their children, Madison (unisex), Avery (unisex) or Hunter (also unisex).
  • (18) Newly developed "unisex" regression equations were developed with "dummy" coding of gender (i.e., 0 = female; 1 = male), age, height, weight, and various interactions.
  • (19) Moreover, application of the unisex phantom procedure to the Trois Rivières sample does little to clarify anticipated sex-related differences in regional growth, and it is argued that univariate standardization against a power function of an arbitrary adult height may not provide the best method of examining the multivariate problem of growth.
  • (20) The site contained information on subjects such as penis tucking, chest-binding and unisex school toilets, Shelton said, and until those references were removed parents would continue to be “misinformed” about Safe Schools by thinking it was purely about anti-bullying.