hypermodern
adjective
hy·per·mod·ern
ˌhī-pər-ˈmä-dərn
1
: extremely modern
What Murphy finds remarkable about SpaceX is its hypermodern corporate culture.—
Chuck Sweeny
In a country that's hypermodern in many regards, "Secrets, Objects," shines an uncomfortable spotlight on the still very traditional mores of marriage and the identity of wives vis-a-vis husbands.—
John Glionna
2
chess
: characterized by a set of strategies developed in the early 20th century that include the control of the center of the chessboard by means of distant pieces rather than more centrally located pawns
a hypermodern player/strategy
Hypermodern chess came into vogue after World War I and posed a real dilemma to the existing classical school of chess theory of: "What to do?"—
Harold Dondis and Chris Chase
hypermodernism
noun
or hyper-modernism
Indeed, the whole thrust of hypermodernism [in chess] was to lure the opponent forward prematurely, cut off his supply lines and slaughter the arrogant advance units.
—
Robert Byrne
hypermodernist
adjective
or hyper-modernist
I had always known from afar that Halston dressed upscale New York women in clothes so unadorned they were hypermodernist compared to Europe's fanciful fashion.
—
Suzy Menkes
It boasts a selection of architectural wonders that ranges from surviving railway-boom warehouses to 20th-century modernist buildings to a handful of hyper-modernist structures.
—
Bartley Kives
hypermodernist
noun
or hyper-modernist
plural hypermodernists or hyper-modernists
Dedicated hypermodernists don't read the books they intend to collect. They read "reading" copies.
—
Christa Worthington
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged




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