ultrarich
adjEtymology
From ultra- + rich.
Definitions
Extremely rich
Extremely rich; very wealthy.
- During the housing boom that ended in 2005, money poured into real estate from investors ranging from the ultrarich to middle-class professionals like doctors, teachers and midlevel managers.
Extremely rich in flavor
Extremely rich in flavor; very sweet, fatty, or intensely flavorful.
- Sporting 205 grams of residual sugar per liter, this backward, ultrarich wine will require cellaring
- Deal with hardness by putting the container in the refrigerator to soften the ice cream gently before scooping, or carefully microwave for a few seconds on low, just as you would for ultrarich super-premium ice creams from the supermarket.
Of a color, extremely bold and vivid.
- "It's got ultrarich color [see pit viper below], tight grain and," he adds, “it's processed in only two hours."
- Apply one coat of Max Factor Vivid Impact Lip Color in Ms. Right (S798) for ultrarich red lips.
›+ 4 more definitionsshow fewer
Extremely thick, smooth, and creamy with a high fat content.
- To get super shine, go for shampoos that remove product buildup, ultrarich conditioners and stylers with vitamins or silicones,
- Created with ultrarich ingredients like avocado oil, Redken's All Soft Shampoo ($7.95) help fight dry-hair disasters.
- The mystique surrounding Creme de la Mer only continues to grow, as celebrities like Madonna, Courteney Cox Arquette, Heather Locklear, and Sharon Stone have sworn by the ultrarich moisturizer.
Unusually full of desired resources, abounding.
- The island's dark, ultrarich soil grows things that make visions of Eden pale.
- Differences in the environments of the localization of rich and ultrarich rare-metal ores are explained, by Konoplev and others (1992), by the heterogenous nature of the ore-formation process.
Composed of extremely costly materials
Composed of extremely costly materials; very luxurious.
- Two half-moon sofas, overstuffed and cushy looking, wear ultrarich red wool upholstery and fill the two corners at the far end of the room, .one on either side of the entrance to the dining room beyond.
The wealthiest class of people.
- On the North Shore, the ultrarich who moved out from Manhattan early in the century actually improved environmental conditions by reforesting the bare farmlands they bought for their estates.
- It looked to be another perfect day in the playland of the ultrarich.
- The number of U.S. millionaires (excluding home equity) jumped from 2 million in 2002 to 2.27 million in 2003, while the number of “ultrarich" worth over $30 million in the United States and Canada grew to 30,000 in 2003 (Frank, 2004).
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for ultrarich. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA