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What is the noun for esthetical?

What's the noun for esthetical? Here's the word you're looking for.

aesthetic
  1. The study of art or beauty.
  2. That which appeals to the senses.
  3. (Internet) The artistic motifs defining a collection of things, especially works of art; more broadly, their vibe
aesthetician
  1. One who studies aesthetics; a student of art or beauty.
  2. A beautician; somebody employed to provide beauty treatments such as manicures and facials.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “Although he initially studied languages, he took composition lessons and was influenced by the musical aesthetician.”
      “A sea-mud mask, used two to three times weekly, can also help, says an aesthetician in California.”
      “This is what the philosopher and aesthetician had in mind when he spoke of humour as a form of common sense.”
aesthete
  1. Someone who cultivates an unusually high sensitivity to beauty, as in art or nature.
  2. Examples:
    1. “His pose was that of the dandy and the aesthete, emphatically not that of the angry young man.”
      “Her attitude is now certainly sadder, her descriptions more concrete, her approach less that of the aesthete.”
      “A gentle aesthete and a shambolic dilettante, he was extraordinarily widely read, but shrewd and critical as well as omnivorous.”
aestheticism
  1. A doctrine which holds aesthetics or beauty as the highest ideal or most basic standard.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Combining documentation with the aestheticism of abstract colour, the work transfigures even the drabbest residential blocks.”
      “When aiming for this ideal, goodness does not mean aestheticism, nor does knighthood mean adultery.”
      “Their formal innovations and aestheticism further pushed the Baudelairean boundaries of poetic language.”
aesthetics
  1. The study or philosophy of beauty.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The addition of these trees to the school grounds will enhance the aesthetics of the landscape.”
      “Thanks again for what you are doing to contribute to an appreciation of aesthetics.”
      “I spend less in the rooms and more in the common spaces, where wear and aesthetics are a concern.”
aestheticist
  1. A proponent of aestheticism.
  2. Examples:
    1. “The difference between these two novellas is the difference between aestheticist despair and messianic hope.”
      “A mania for things Asian raged in England then, in concert with the aestheticist movement — a reaction, exalting unalloyed beauty, against the moralistic constraints of Victorian taste.”
      “He thinks Dewey has an idealized view of art that borrows from the very aestheticist theories he criticizes, and that Dewey does not sufficiently question the boundaries of art.”
aestheticization
  1. Alternative form of aestheticisation
  2. Examples:
    1. “Our culture has aestheticized politics as well as war, and aestheticization now also threatens the art of architecture.”
      “This series is inspired by the increasing aestheticization of destruction in the media. It questions the relation between a form and a matter.”
      “Fashion and motor racing demand the aestheticization of an individual or object.”
estheticism
  1. (American) Alternative spelling of aestheticism
  2. Examples:
    1. “Yet, in its disavowal of pure estheticism and visual idealization, Lee's work seems more American than Korean.”
      “Balthus's paintings aim at a classical order and refined estheticism, yet within this timelessness lurk subliminal tensions.”
      “Though not much stressed in the catalogue's writings, Dickinson's pronounced estheticism is key to his sensibility.”
esthetician
  1. Alternative spelling of aesthetician
  2. Examples:
    1. “During my spa visit, I had the opportunity to talk with the lovely and talented esthetician.”
      “Claudia is a licensed esthetician and freelance journalist based in Los Angeles.”
      “Half-way through, I find myself doing yogic breathing and meditation to keep from popping the esthetician in the face.”
aestheticisation
  1. Act or process of aestheticising.
esthetics
  1. (US) Alternative spelling of aesthetics
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Dou Wei's talent in music is unreservedly and unpremeditatedly incarnated in his music esthetics.”
      “The desirability of the effects and the legitimacy of the causes are questions left to esthetics, psychology, and moral philosophy.”
      “Last, it is important to recognize that a passport photo will never rival the esthetics of a photograph from a studio.”
esthete
  1. Alternative spelling of aesthete
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “He was an accomplished scholar who rejected the constraints of a mandarin career to live the life of an esthete.”
      “Indeed most people know little about the historian, the sociologist, the educationalist, the writer, the journalist, the esthete, the artist.”
      “Drop all stereotypes of Eliot the touchy esthete.”
aesthetican
  1. One versed in aesthetics.
aestheticisations
  1. plural of aestheticisation
aestheticizations
  1. plural of aestheticization
aestheticians
aestheticisms
aestheticists
  1. plural of aestheticist
aestheticans
  1. plural of aesthetican
estheticisms
  1. plural of estheticism
estheticians
  1. plural of esthetician
aesthetes
  1. plural of aesthete
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “In the 1920s and 30s it developed into a glamorous resort populated by rich aesthetes, dissident intellectuals and artists.”
      “The film had so much potential to please the aesthetes, to assuage the jangled nerves.”
      “The book contains fascinating chapters on young militants, flappers and bohemian aesthetes, and on street life.”
esthetes
  1. plural of esthete
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “They underpin the allure that bulthaup kitchens and living spaces have worldwide for esthetes, bons viveurs and cookery enthusiasts.”
      “Expression domains include esthetes and the ampullary system in polyplacophorans as well as the eyes of cephalopods.”
      “The painter's orphic sleight of hand was abetted by arcane titles that conjure profligate aristocrats, sexual libertines, adepts of the dark arts and drugged esthetes.”
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