Word info Synonyms

new school

Speech parts

1. new school - Noun

2. new school - Adjective

Meaning

new school (plural new schools)

(informal, also attributive) A style, way of thinking, or method for accomplishing a task that is typical of the current era, as opposed to former eras.
Antonym: old school

new school (comparative more new school, superlative most new school)

Of or pertaining to a new school style, way of thinking, or method.

new-school (comparative more new-school, superlative most new-school)

Alternative form of new school

Source: en.wiktionary.org

Alternative names

new-school

Synonyms

Examples

There's no difference between fame and infamy now. There's a new school of professional famous people that don't do anything. They don't create anything. Ricky Gervais

The struggle for existence is very difficult here [Berlin! - in 1911 Kirchner and his Brücke-friends moved from Dresden to Berlin], but the possibilities are also greater. I hope that we can create a fruitful new school and convince many new friends of the value of our efforts. Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

I would lie in bed the night before a new school and decide who I was going to be. It would usually be based on someone I admired from the school before. Josh Lucas

Being a new character is like going to a new school. You have to try to maintain your own autonomy and your own personality. Mia Maestro

I'm not trying to be new school and I'm not old school - I'm classic. There's a lot of new cars and there's a lot of old cars, but I'm just classic in doing what I do. LL Cool J

When you get to a certain age, it's kind of the same thing. There's no new school to go to, no new teachers. There's some comfort in that. Fred Willard

Close letter words and terms