nuance|nuances in English
noun
[nu·ance || nuː'ɑns /njuː'ɑːns]
slight difference, subtle distinction, nicety
Use "nuance|nuances" in a sentence
1. It's performed with wickedly spiked nuance.
2. Linguists explore the nuances of language.
3. Case COMP/M.#- Aeroports de Paris/The Nuance Group
4. He was aware of every nuance in her voice.
5. Television has no time for nuance or subtlety.
6. No official nuance definition of "Dannebrog rød" exists.
7. But nuance rarely figures in the debates of our age.
8. Ambrain has a sweet coffee musty grain malt butterscotch nuances
9. There are layers of nuance and humor in her writing.
10. I wish I hadn't become so conscious of every little nuance.
11. Not " getting " deception or nuance, they are straitlaced and humorless.
12. Her singing has both warmth of sound and delicacy of nuance.
13. He watched her face intently to catch every nuance of expression.
14. These nuances had to be taken into account in the report.
15. Its dramatic nuances were often generalised to the point of opacity.
16. Rather, Cain is depicted as a man of emotional subtlety and nuance
17. A baby is sensitive to the slightest nuances in its mother's voice.
18. Its aftertaste presents fruit aromas together with nuances of bitter almonds.
19. OBRIEN: Let's talk about the specific nuance, really, of that point.
20. Europeans prefer complexity and nuance, the Japanese revere minuteness and minimalism.
21. The painter has managed to capture every nuance of the woman's expression.
22. The " national " in its headline was a regulatory nuance rather than a description.
23. 18 As it opens further, nuances of treacle, aniseed and graphite slowly emerge.
24. The nuances and "Brahmsian" techniques are extraordinary and vintage Brahms
25. In Cartwheel, duBois delivers a novel of propulsive psychological suspense and rare moral nuance