Poirotesque
English
    
    Etymology
    
Poirot + -esque
Adjective
    
Poirotesque (comparative more Poirotesque, superlative most Poirotesque)
- Reminiscent of Hercule Poirot, a fictional Belgian detective in the works of Agatha Christie, known for his finicky neatness and for assembling suspects at the conclusion of a case to explain what happened and who committed the crime.
-  1990, JACT Review, page 29:- Even more stimulating is the sleuth-like pursuit of clues in Ovid culminating in a Poirotesque gathering of all threads in a final denouement […]
 
-  2000, Sam Mangat, The Homestead: The Great Space Mutiny, page 254:- The tabloids played on the drama and gave it a Poirotesque twist, of deep plots being hatched in space to do away with troublesome officers.
 
-  2009, Daniel Smith, The Sherlock Holmes Companion: An Elementary Guide, page 27:- While generally restraining himself from the Poirotesque habit of assembling rooms full of suspects to heighten the sense of theatre at the denouement of a case, he would occasionally milk a scene.
 
-  2012, Warren Brown, Francis Birtles:- Photographs of Murif on the journey show him looking somewhat Hercule Poirotesque, with a neatly trimmed beard and moustache and wearing a homburg hat. The rest of his attire was designed purely for comfort, […]
 
 
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