What's the difference between stylish and stylist?

Stylish


Definition:

  • (a.) Having style or artistic quality; given to, or fond of, the display of style; highly fashionable; modish; as, a stylish dress, house, manner.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Scientists are looking at making fabrics that can absorb poisonous gases or harmful bacteria, or conduct electricity, and be used to make stylish garments.
  • (2) "She [Simpson] was one of the most stylish women of the day, and there is a lasting fascination with their lives together which shows no sign of going away," said Bryony Meredith, head of Sotheby's jewellery department.
  • (3) City’s play is as stylish as anything Prada has to offer at New York fashion week.
  • (4) This year, after a generation of terminal decline, it won an award for stylish restoration that saved the birthplace of the seventh earl of Shaftesbury , the great 19th-century reformer who took up Wilberforce’s campaign to abolish slavery, and saw it through to victory.
  • (5) The reception area segues into the equally stylish Restaurante el Disparate.
  • (6) And a few young Muslims, of course, become radicalised, hijacking Islam for violent extremism and hatred, the polar opposite of Generation M. Stylish cover-up: inside International Modest fashion week Read more I ask her who the book is aimed at.
  • (7) Equally popular was the stylish Borsalino, starring Belmondo and Alain Delon as insouciant gangsters in 1930s Marseilles.
  • (8) Side-entrance shame The brochure for the upmarket apartments of One Commercial Street, on the edge of the City, boasts of a "bespoke entrance lobby ... With the ambience of a stylish hotel reception area, it creates a stylish yet secure transition space between your home and the City streets".
  • (9) The stylish, varnished wooden interior and whitewashed walls has a slightly Danish feel, but General Merchant’s brunch-y, all-day menu is inspired by Australian cafe culture, where good coffee and pan-global fusion plates are the norm.
  • (10) Welbeck was fouled 25 yards out and the wall parted obligingly as Van Persie sized up his shot and pulled back that stylish left foot.
  • (11) Photograph: Fox Searchlight Stylish neckwear The design of The Grand Budapest Hotel is perhaps Anderson’s most ambitious effort yet and, true to impeccable form, the neckwear is not found wanting.
  • (12) Instead, when we meet her at the beginning of the series, Nyborg is more concerned with moving house – presumably supplying viewers with shots of a variety of stylish new light fittings and perplexing floor plans to obsess over – than a political party with which she is increasingly disillusioned.
  • (13) If United occasionally looked slow in thought and movement, it was because their opponents passed the ball so stylishly.
  • (14) To the rear is the stylishly poised Miramar restaurant and on one side the jauntier hotel Belle-Vue, with its tiny, busy balcony restaurant poking out on the first floor.
  • (15) The lodge’s stylish restaurant, The Tree House, offers cuisine that blends the best of Peruvian, Asian, Italian and Latin American flavours.
  • (16) Both were better than I expected when I watched them perform before Christmas, though neither too stylish or lively.
  • (17) There is an increasing number of boutique hotels – I spent a night at the super-stylish Estalagem in nearby Ponta do Sol, which has recently opened a cheaper, funky sister property, Hotel da Vila .
  • (18) With stylish monochrome graphics and frequently fiendish puzzles, it's a rewarding and original adventure.
  • (19) From his brutal Pusher trilogy to the weird and wonderful anti-biopic Bronson , these films are more like art installations, shimmering with stylish violence and near-hallucinatory moments.
  • (20) "That is probably not the way to create some of the stylishness."

Stylist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who is a master or a model of style, especially in writing or speaking; a critic of style.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These folk spend in a day what most people earn in a year on hiring hotel suites and setting up temporary fashion-show rooms in the hysterical hope that their wares will attract the eye of that most important person in town that week: the celebrity stylist.
  • (2) "As a stylist Brown gets better and better: where once he was abysmal he is now just very poor," wrote Jake Kerridge in the Daily Telegraph .
  • (3) That suggests that, stylistically, the best opponents for Madrid are … Barcelona.
  • (4) Think co-ordinator Dr Carlos Gigoux said: “Think seminars really make a university what it should be - a place where you think creatively and critically and engage with society from a human and professional experience.” Runner up: Teesside University The Student’s Academic Literacy Tool (Salt) is a writing tool that helps students learn about the key stylistic features required for a high standard of academic writing.
  • (5) Through press releases, videos and Clinton’s own words, Democrats quickly drew a portrait in which the differences between Trump and the rest of the Republican field were merely stylistic.
  • (6) Those typical stylistic and rhetorical structures which lead to the impression of schizophasia are isolated.
  • (7) Asos also publishes a glossy magazine with circulation of 470,000 – more than Glamour , Grazia or even the giveaway Stylist .
  • (8) "Pictures are sent from our team to stylists in LA the week before the show as the catwalk collection is being finalised.
  • (9) But it's not just the celebrity stylist these clothes have to appeal to – no, no, no!
  • (10) The other costumes on the top rail are a pink cowgirl outfit, a pink waitress costume, a pink and purple superhero costume and a "hair stylist" tabard, in pink with purple trim, complete with plastic comb, mirror, scissors and hairdryer.
  • (11) Talkback Thames, the production company behind X Factor, said it was unaware of interns assisting the show's stylist, Laury Smith, and added that "her interns are not X Factor interns".
  • (12) Bad scientific writing involves more than stylistic inelegance: it is often the outward and visible form of an inward confusion of thought.
  • (13) Mills's background might be described as down to earth - he was born in Felixstowe, Suffolk, the son of a mathematics teacher, grew up in Norfolk, and worked briefly as a clerk before breaking into the theatre in 1929 in the chorus of a revue - and a quality of everyday realism seemed to cling to his best performances, without detracting from his stylistic range.
  • (14) But it's pre-stylist, pre-decorator and pre that urge to frame up a room for the camera.
  • (15) After the jet-black high school satire Heathers pulled the rug out from under John Hughes and his oversharing Brat Pack, in 1989, American adolescents were left with few offerings, most of them wistful odes to another age – either stylistically, as with the overblown, pirate-radio-themed Christian Slater vehicle Pump Up the Volume; or quite literally, in the case of Richard Linklater’s nostalgia-fuelled 70s pastiche, Dazed and Confused.
  • (16) The reason for this shall be discussed another time but this tendency towards conservatism in American fashion goes quadruply so among American commentators on red-carpet fashion and, knowing this, the stylists and the designers obligingly dress their clients as conservatively (boringly) as possible.
  • (17) So the central character, Katniss, is both a warrior and a reality TV star with her own personal stylist.
  • (18) This was a mature collection for sass & bide, neatly styled (a collaboration between Heidi Middleton, Sarah-Jane Clarke and renowned stylist Vanessa Traina) with its polished blazers, colour-blocked ensembles and embellished mini-dresses.
  • (19) The people who deserve the biggest credit on this remake are the stylists.
  • (20) A 2010 survey by Stylist magazine found that more than 96% of women feel guilty at least once a day, while for almost half, the feeling arose up to four times a day.

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