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Sophisticate is a verb.
Yes it is (meaning stylish or sophisticated). It comes from the noun class.
The correct spelling of the adjective is 'sophisticated' (modern, stylish, or mannered).
(The adjective means "modern" or stylish, or up-to-date.)The club was known for having a sophisticated clientele.She changed her hairstyle to appear more sophisticated.The network connection devices employ very sophisticated programming.
The word 'sophisticated' is not a noun at all. The word 'sophisticated' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The abstract noun form is 'sophistication', a word for the a quality of being cultured, knowledgeable, complex, or subtle; a word for a concept.A related noun form is 'sophisticate', a concrete noun, a word for a person.
The adjective that describes the noun in the phrase "my boss invited me to a fancy dinner" is "fancy." It characterizes the type of dinner being described, indicating that it is elegant or sophisticated in nature.
Something that is sophistical seems to make sense, but is actually false or incomplete. An example of sophistical used in a sentence is: His sophistical argument sounded great at the dinner party, but when I thought about it further on the way home I found I disagreed.
No. Class (style) is a noun, but it is sometimes used in place of the adjective 'classy' (sophisticated, upscale) in terms such as "a class act."Similarly, class (noun for a group or school group) can be used as a noun adjunct in terms such as "class clown" and "class action."
Sophisticated Lady was created in 1932.
The word sophisticated in Spanish is sofisticado.
what page in the oautsiders is sophisticated on
Sophisticated Swing was created in 1957.