From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfuturisticfu‧tur‧is‧tic /ˌfjuːtʃəˈrɪstɪk◂/ adjective1MODERNsomething which is futuristic looks unusual and modern, as if it belongs in the future instead of the presentThe futuristic sports stadium is the pride of the city.2FUTUREfuturistic ideas, books, films etc imagine what may happen in the future, especially through scientificdevelopmentsOrwell’s disturbing futuristic novel, ‘1984’Examples from the Corpusfuturistic• They are unashamedly retro in their appeal, but they could equally be futuristic.• As futuristic as the concept seems, it addresses here and now one of the most important issues in multimedia development.• Advances in technology have meant that futuristicfabrics have become a reality, changing the whole nature of how we dress.• This is especially true of original and futuristic ideas.• Its array of futuristicindustries is second to none.• The Lake Buena Vistahotel also plans Kidsuites designed as futuristicspacecapsules and igloos.• We pretended to fly to distantplanets in futuristicspaceships.• The car, with its sleekfuturisticstyling, certainly looks impressive.• An elaborate design of the futuristic Washington was put on displayTuesday at UnionStation.