variants also la-de-da or lah-de-dah or lah-dee-dah or lah-di-dah

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for la-di-da
Adjective
  • Wine doesn’t have to be pretentious or complicated.
    Liz Thach, Forbes.com, 7 May 2025
  • Trust the French to come up with the most pretentious word in the dictionary.
    Dwight Garner, New York Times, 28 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • The film will follow a pompous food critic (Roth) and the earnest son-of-a-chef (Fernández) who must outcook, outrun, and outwit a ruthless queen-pin (Higareda Howes) in order to save the son’s family restaurant – and themselves.
    Andreas Wiseman, Deadline, 7 May 2025
  • Jain didn’t barge onto the scene with the pompous bravado as many others do.
    Alexander Puutio, Forbes.com, 16 May 2025
Adjective
  • The single-story, low-profile home houses three bedrooms—nothing oversized or ostentatious.
    Natalie Hoberman, Forbes.com, 27 May 2025
  • The Saudis envisage The Line — an ambitious, or ostentatious, trail of infrastructure spanning 170km — being front and centre when the country hosts the FIFA World Cup in 2034.
    Phil Hay, New York Times, 20 May 2025
Adjective
  • The best way to express this high-minded idealism was by mass-producing extremely potent, extremely pure LSD, almost as if its non-dilution was an expression of their own virtue.
    John Semley, Rolling Stone, 19 Apr. 2025
  • For generations, students and researchers from around the world have flocked to Boston, drawn not just to a college or university but to a region where high-minded intellectual life was part of its brand.
    Jenna Russell, New York Times, 6 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • In a clear sign of his dwindling utility, his next move at DOGE, far less grandiose than his initial one, will be to modernize the federal government’s computers.
    S.E. Cupp, New York Daily News, 28 May 2025
  • An array of notables—Michelle Monaghan, Leslie Bibb, Laura Harrier, Andie MacDowell, Nicky Hilton Rothschild, Kathy Hilton, Claire Danes, and more—artfully intermingled in the museum's grandiose halls.
    Gaby Keiderling, Vogue, 21 May 2025
Adjective
  • Magazine editors weren’t the only highfalutin New Yorkers who fetishized the Post.
    Vinson Cunningham, New Yorker, 5 May 2025
  • The dialogue is overly ornate, with long monologues filled with highfalutin references, and there’s no distinct characterization: A Bronx pawnbroker talks the same as a Manhattan equities trader.
    Dave Nemetz, TVLine, 11 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Twenty-three years of a smug, smarmy host, and a bunch of sportswriters desperate for sound bites and attention.
    Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Times, 31 May 2025
  • There’s the divorced couple maintaining their relationship for their children; the happy and occasionally smug monogamist; the man who prefers not to commit; the woman who can’t decide.
    Alissa Wilkinson, New York Times, 15 May 2025
Adjective
  • Richard was known for being outspoken, if not arrogant, consistently rubbing his Tagi tribe the wrong way and offending some of them with his blatant display of nudity on the island.
    Nick Caruso, TVLine, 27 May 2025
  • Multiple people described him to me as unpopular and arrogant.
    Amanda Chicago Lewis, Harpers Magazine, 29 Apr. 2025
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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Cite this Entry

“La-di-da.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/la-di-da. Accessed 4 Jun. 2025.

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