Oxfordesque
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Oxfordesque (comparative more Oxfordesque, superlative most Oxfordesque)
- Resembling or characteristic of the University of Oxford.
- 1994, Tom Bradley, Acting Alone, BrownTrout Publishers, Inc., →ISBN (hardcover), →ISBN (softcover), chapter 10, 87:
- Yes, the sudden, forced move to the sleazy new building at the unfashionable end of campus, after their splendid Oxfordesque castle had been co-opted by the fascists, had definitely taken a constipating effect on the flow of ideas in and around the Anthropology Department.
- 2006, Christian K. Anderson, “Building an Icon: The Rise and Fall of John G. Bowman, Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh, 1921-1945”, in Roger L. Geiger, editor, Iconic Leaders in Higher Education, Transaction Publishers, published 2011, →ISBN, page 142:
- Edward Mellon's drawings depicted the tall structure Bowman required, but also included a number of odd-shaped Oxfordesque quadrangles surrounding the structure.
- 1994, Tom Bradley, Acting Alone, BrownTrout Publishers, Inc., →ISBN (hardcover), →ISBN (softcover), chapter 10, 87: