Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun fancier
1 sense of fancier
Sense 1
fancier, enthusiast -- (a person having a strong liking for something)
=> admirer, adorer -- (someone who admires a young woman; "she had many admirers")
Antonyms of adj fancy
1 sense of fancy
Sense 1
fancy (vs. plain) -- (not plain; decorative or ornamented; "fancy handwriting"; "fancy clothes")
plain (vs. fancy) -- (not elaborate or elaborated; simple; "plain food"; "stuck to the plain facts"; "a plain blue suit"; "a plain rectangular brick building")
=> austere, severe, stark, stern -- (severely simple; "a stark interior")
=> bare (prenominal), mere (prenominal), simple (prenominal) -- (apart from anything else; without additions or modifications; "only the bare facts"; "shocked by the mere idea"; "the simple passage of time was enough"; "the simple truth")
=> chaste -- (pure and simple in design or style; "a chaste border of conventionalized flowers")
=> dry -- ((of food) eaten without a spread or sauce or other garnish; "dry toast"; "dry meat")
=> dry -- (having no adornment or coloration; "dry facts"; "rattled off the facts in a dry mechanical manner")
=> featureless -- (lacking distinguishing characteristics or features; "the featureless landscape of the steppe")
=> homely -- (plain and unpretentious; "homely truths"; "letters to his son full of homely advice"; "homely fare")
=> inelaborate, unelaborate -- (not elaborate; lacking rich or complex detail)
=> literal -- (avoiding embellishment or exaggeration (used for emphasis); "it's the literal truth")
=> simple -- (unornamented; "a simple country schoolhouse"; "her black dress--simple to austerity")
=> tailored, trim -- (severely simple in line or design; "a neat tailored suit"; "tailored curtains")
=> vanilla -- (plain and without any extras or adornments; "the most common type of bond is the straight or plain vanilla bond"; "the basic car is known as the vanilla version")
Similarity of adj fancy
1 sense of fancy
Sense 1
fancy (vs. plain) -- (not plain; decorative or ornamented; "fancy handwriting"; "fancy clothes")
=> aureate, florid, flamboyant -- (elaborately or excessively ornamented; "flamboyant handwriting"; "the senator's florid speech")
=> baroque, churrigueresque, churrigueresco -- (having elaborate symmetrical ornamentation; "the building...frantically baroque"-William Dean Howells)
=> busy, fussy -- (overcrowded or cluttered with detail; "a busy painting"; "a fussy design")
=> dressy -- (in fancy clothing)
=> crackle -- (having the surface decorated with a network of fine cracks, as in crackleware; "a crackle glaze")
=> damascene -- ((of metals) decorated or inlaid with a wavy pattern of different (especially precious) metals; "a damascened sword")
=> damask -- (having a woven pattern; "damask table linens")
=> elaborate, luxuriant -- (marked by complexity and richness of detail; "an elaborate lace pattern")
=> embattled, battlemented, castled, castellated -- (having or resembling repeated square indentations like those in a battlement; "a crenelated molding")
=> fanciful -- (having a curiously intricate quality; "a fanciful pattern with intertwined vines and flowers")
=> fantastic -- (extravagantly fanciful in design, construction, appearance; "Gaudi's fantastic architecture")
=> lacy, lacelike -- (made of or resembling lace; "a lacy gown"; "a lacy leaf")
=> puff, puffed -- (gathered for protruding fullness; "puff sleeves")
=> rococo -- (having excessive asymmetrical ornamentation; "an exquisite gilded rococo mirror")
=> vermicular, vermiculate, vermiculated -- (decorated with wormlike tracery or markings; "vermicular (or vermiculated) stonework")
Also See-> adorned#1, decorated#1; rhetorical#2