some kind of
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Determiner
[edit]- a mediocre; a bare minimum; (denoting that something only barely fits a certain category, or is very mediocre in it)
- A remarkable.
- 1998, Anne Rivers Siddons, Low Country, New York: Harper Collins:
- I'm not going to pry into your life, but I wish you'd tell me how you got to the South Carolina Lowcountry. That trip must be some kind of story.
- 2005, Suzanne Brockmann, Patrick G. Lawlor (Patrick Girard), Melanie Ewbank, Into the storm, 1st edition, Grand Haven, MI: Brilliance Audio:
- Lindsey glanced at Tom, who smiled, apparently in no hurry to talk about that training op. Red Cell. That was going to be some kind of fun.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see some, kind, of.
Synonyms
[edit]- (remarkable): some type of, some sort of, some
Adverb
[edit]some kind of (not comparable)
- Used as an intensifier of adjectives: remarkably
- 2003, Sandra Hill, Tall, dark, and Cajun, New York City: Warner Books:
- "Why is he grounded?" / "Went to a[sic] underwear option party up in Natchitoches. That boy, he is some kind of wild."
- 2003, Cathy Day, “The Last Member of the Boela Tribe”, in The Antioch Review, volume 61, number 4, page 598:
- Those women must have been some kind of ugly.
- 2012, Blaize Clement, The cat sitter's pajamas, 1st edition, New York: Minotaur Books:
- Those women that stalk us have to be some kind of sick.
Synonyms
[edit]- (remarkably): some type of, some sort of