different between kaleidoscopic vs specked

kaleidoscopic

English

Alternative forms

  • caleidoscopic

Etymology

From kaleidoscope +? -ic.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /k??la?d??sk?p?k/
  • (US) IPA(key): /k??la?d??sk??p?k/

Adjective

kaleidoscopic (comparative more kaleidoscopic, superlative most kaleidoscopic)

  1. Of, relating to, or produced by a kaleidoscope.
  2. (figuratively) Brightly coloured and continuously changing in pattern, as if in a kaleidoscope.
    • December 8 2020, David Barnett, "How John Lennon was made into a myth[1]" in BBC Online
      Like scholars picking over the childhood of Buddha, we want to understand how Lennon became the man he did, but there’s also a purity to this portrayal because it presents Lennon before the prism of fame split him into his kaleidoscopic multitude of facets that allowed artists to imprint their own ideas of what John Lennon was or should have been.

Translations

kaleidoscopic From the web:

  • kaleidoscopic meaning
  • what does kaleidoscope mean
  • what is kaleidoscopic vision
  • what is kaleidoscopic packaging
  • what is kaleidoscopic reading
  • what is kaleidoscopic disintegration
  • what does kaleidoscope symbolize
  • kaleidoscope world


specked

English

Etymology

From Middle English speckyd; equivalent to speck +? -ed.

Adjective

specked (comparative more specked, superlative most specked)

  1. Having specks or spots, speckled.

specked From the web:

  • what does speckled mean
  • what does specced out mean
  • what do speckled mean
  • speckled means
  • speckled band
  • what does fully specced mean
  • what does speckled mean in ana
  • what is speckled
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