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grotesque
[groh-tesk]
adjective
odd or unnatural in shape, appearance, or character; fantastically ugly or absurd; bizarre.
fantastic in the shaping and combination of forms, as in decorative work combining incongruous human and animal figures with scrolls, foliage, etc.
noun
any grotesque object, design, person, or thing.
grotesque
/ ɡrəʊˈtɛsk /
adjective
strangely or fantastically distorted; bizarre
a grotesque reflection in the mirror
of or characteristic of the grotesque in art
absurdly incongruous; in a ludicrous context
a grotesque turn of phrase
noun
a 16th-century decorative style in which parts of human, animal, and plant forms are distorted and mixed
a decorative device, as in painting or sculpture, in this style
printing the family of 19th-century sans serif display types
any grotesque person or thing
Other Word Forms
- grotesquely adverb
- grotesqueness noun
- ungrotesque adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of grotesque1
Word History and Origins
Origin of grotesque1
Compare Meanings
How does grotesque compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
With the genre claiming 17% of the domestic box office for 2025, production studios are eager to feed our seemingly bottomless appetite for cinematic grotesques, especially those based on true stories.
Is it a grotesque spectacle or pushing the boundaries of human achievement?
But his chronicle of that heist expands into a saga of psychological suspense spanning nearly two decades and following half a dozen characters whose lives are twisted into grotesque shapes by their addictive compulsions.
Keck’s horizontal equestrian sculpture, which intimates occupation of the land, became Walker’s vertical, a grotesque standing humanoid, disemboweled.
But the most grotesque of U.S. interference in the region was the government’s complicity in the so-called “dirty wars” of Argentina and Chile in the 1970s.
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