From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbizarrebi‧zarre /bəˈzɑː $ -ˈzɑːr/●くろまる●くろまる○しろまる adjectiveSTRANGEvery unusual or strangea bizarre coincidencedancers in rather bizarre costumes► see thesaurus at strange —bizarrely adverbExamples from the Corpusbizarre• The characters Arden creates are often odd and sometimes bizarre.• The marriage between the two stars was as bizarre as it was short-lived.• Woodsdisappeared in very bizarrecircumstances, and no trace of him has ever been found.• The bizarre circumstances of her early life left her with a scatter-shot education and an early talent for embellishing the truth.• Watching this movie is like having a bizarre, detailed series of dreams just prior to dawn.• It was bizarre - if we took longer than five minutes in the bathroom, we had to explain why to our manager.• A bizarreinterpretationoccurred to him.• First, and perhaps most bizarre, is the field entitled design history.• They are not just a little different, they are bizarre looking.• Half the fun is working out where bizarrereality parts from realisticfantasy!• bizarrereligioussects• They tell the most bizarre stories about him.Originbizarre(1600-1700)FrenchItalianbizzarro"always changing, unreasonable", from Spanishbizarro"brave", perhaps from Basquebizarra"beard"