| 1. | (often initial capital letter ) of or pertaining to a style of architecture and art originating in Italy in the early 17th century and variously prevalent in Europe and the New World for a century and a half, characterized by free and sculptural use of the classical orders and ornament, by forms in elevation and plan suggesting movement, and by dramatic effect in which architecture, painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts often worked to combined effect. |
| 2. | (sometimes initial capital letter ) of or pertaining to the musical period following the Renaissance, extending roughly from 1600 to 1750. |
| 3. | extravagantly ornate, florid, and convoluted in character or style: the baroque prose of the novel's more lurid passages. |
| 4. | irregular in shape: baroque pearls. |
| 5. | (often initial capital letter ) the baroque style or period. |
| 6. | anything extravagantly ornamented, esp. something so ornate as to be in bad taste. |
| 7. | an irregularly shaped pearl. |

"This style in decorations got the epithet of Barroque taste, derived from a word signifying pearls and teeth of unequal size." [Fuseli's translation of Winkelmann, 1765]Klein suggests the name may be from It. painter Federigo Barocci (1528-1612), a founder of the style. How to tell baroque from rococo, according to Fowler: "The characteristics of baroque are grandeur, pomposity, and weight; those of rococo are inconsequence, grace, and lightness." But the two terms often used without distinction for styles featuring odd and excessive ornamentation.
Baroque
An early logic programming language written by Boyer and Moore in 1972.
["Computational Logic: Structure Sharing and Proof of program Properties", J. Moore, DCL Memo 67, U Edinburgh 1974].
[The Jargon File]
(1995-02-22)
baroque
Feature-encrusted; complex; gaudy; verging on excessive. Said of hardware or (especially) software designs, this has many of the connotations of elephantine or monstrosity but is less extreme and not pejorative in itself. "Metafont even has features to introduce random variations to its letterform output. Now *that* is baroque!"
See also rococo.
[The Jargon File]
(1995-02-22)