Similar words: highbrow, weighbridge, reddish-brown, highball, high bar, high beam, thighbone, highborn. Meaning: adj. highly cultured or educated.
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1. He presents his own highbrow literary programme.
2. It's better for you to highbrow her, but you have to read these two books beforehand.
3. Highbrow critics sniff that the programme was "too sophisticated" to appeal to most viewers.
4. The usual metropolitan and highbrow bias can be discerned.
5. The highbrow national monthly published his musings in the spring.
6. Surprisingly, readers of the highbrow press found their papers scarcely any more useful than readers of the lowbrow press.
7. Her language may be a bit highbrow, but it strikes a chord with many of Britain's state school heads.
8. This leaves him precariously balancing his highbrow and lowbrow selves.
9. Readers of tabloid newspapers are less interested in politics and less likely to tune into highbrow news programmes.
10. The Third was a highbrow station,[Sentence dictionary] with a tiny proportion of the audience.
11. Highbrow sources were clearly much more attractive to people who were particularly interested in politics.
12. Highbrow publishers and small bookshops are the most resolute opponents.
13. He picked up a book on the floor... something highbrow.
14. But seriously, you say, how highbrow can tequila really get?
15. He picked up a book that was lying on the floor. It was something highbrow - Kafka, I think.
More similar words: highbrow, weighbridge, reddish-brown, highball, high bar, high beam, thighbone, highborn, crowed, borrowed, narrowed, furrowed, highball glass, high blood pressure, borrowed plumes, light brown, high-powered, thoroughbred, highlighted, highlighter, highlights, highlighting, high and mighty, owed, highlight, mowed, bowed, showed, cowed, sowed.