Nature | Forme |
---|---|
Positif | labyrinthine |
Comparatif | more labyrinthine |
Superlatif | most labyrinthine |
labyrinthine
In the pyloric canal, muscular ridges are more fixed than elsewhere and produce quite a labyrinthine surface.— (Steen L. Jensen, H. Gregerson. M. H. Shokouh-Amin, F. G. Moody, (eds.), Essentials of Experimental Surgery: Gastroenterology, page 27/4, 1996)
Crane trotted along the labyrinthine corridors of deck 3, accompanied by a young marine with close-cropped blond hair.— (Lincoln Child, Deep Storm, page 185, 2011)
Mamet, like one of his characters, invents a labyrinthine, convoluted spiel leading nowhere, and like a magician distracts us with his words while elaborately not producing a rabbit from his hat.— (Roger Ebert, Review of "American Buffalo", 1996)
Any attempt to answer that question would carry us into the labyrinthine corridors of Jefferson’s famously elusive mind.— (Joseph J. Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, page 51, 2000)
By coupling "essence" with "name" within a series of contraposed pairs of names, Socrates indicates the point to which he thinks his labyrinthine argument has led so far in the Cratylus.— (Michael W. Riley, "Plato’s Cratylus: Argument, form, and structure", page 103, 2005)