What's the difference between newfangle and newfangled?

Newfangle


Definition:

  • (a.) Eager for novelties; desirous of changing.
  • (v. t.) To change by introducing novelties.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Our skin is not being subjected to newfangled cosmetic preparations in order to observe whether we come out in plooks (Scots parlance for the common spot).
  • (2) IRL, some of these things don't even look newfangled: people are still putting weird things on their heads and still taking photos of gadget-wearing celebrities who look deeply confused .
  • (3) Our sitting president, Barack Obama, changed the logo game back in 2008 – making him less a candidate and more a newfangled flavor of soda pop.
  • (4) Collateral behind newfangled derivatives was worthless.
  • (5) His panache and strength of will had helped the Yorkshire club to hold off Manchester United to win the last title before the introduction of the Premier League and he then scored the first hat‑trick of the newfangled top flight when Leeds thrashed Tottenham Hotspur 5-0 just a couple of weeks after his three goals in the Charity Shield victory against Liverpool.
  • (6) Sleek, black, and easily confused with a fine-point felt-tip, this newfangled "nicotine delivery system" is dead cool.
  • (7) Orwell never explains why the stolid old Anglo-Saxon should be any more "clear" than such newfangled horrors; as "predict" and "extraneous" demonstrate now, words minted from the classical will very rapidly seem entirely normal.
  • (8) And they were faintly ashamed of the local blackhouses, preferring instead to be pictured against the newfangled harling.

Newfangled


Definition:

  • (a.) Newmade; formed with the affectation of novelty.
  • (a.) Disposed to change; inclined to novelties; given to new theories or fashions.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Our skin is not being subjected to newfangled cosmetic preparations in order to observe whether we come out in plooks (Scots parlance for the common spot).
  • (2) IRL, some of these things don't even look newfangled: people are still putting weird things on their heads and still taking photos of gadget-wearing celebrities who look deeply confused .
  • (3) Our sitting president, Barack Obama, changed the logo game back in 2008 – making him less a candidate and more a newfangled flavor of soda pop.
  • (4) Collateral behind newfangled derivatives was worthless.
  • (5) His panache and strength of will had helped the Yorkshire club to hold off Manchester United to win the last title before the introduction of the Premier League and he then scored the first hat‑trick of the newfangled top flight when Leeds thrashed Tottenham Hotspur 5-0 just a couple of weeks after his three goals in the Charity Shield victory against Liverpool.
  • (6) Sleek, black, and easily confused with a fine-point felt-tip, this newfangled "nicotine delivery system" is dead cool.
  • (7) Orwell never explains why the stolid old Anglo-Saxon should be any more "clear" than such newfangled horrors; as "predict" and "extraneous" demonstrate now, words minted from the classical will very rapidly seem entirely normal.
  • (8) And they were faintly ashamed of the local blackhouses, preferring instead to be pictured against the newfangled harling.

Words possibly related to "newfangle"

Words possibly related to "newfangled"