fuguelike
English
Etymology
fugue + -like
Adjective
fuguelike (comparative more fuguelike, superlative most fuguelike)
- Resembling a fugue
Adverb
fuguelike (comparative more fuguelike, superlative most fuguelike)
- In the manner of a fugue
- 2007 October 21, Field Maloney, “Here in Dinkytown”, in New York Times:
- Ultimately, Furst suggests that each generation is condemned to live out its parents’ unresolved stories, over and over, fuguelike.
-