(1) So many, and not just the young, want the ambience - a louche , bohemian, coffee house style - and not the substance.(2) Witty examinations of the more louche aspects of sexuality are masked by music so exquisite that the provocative subject matter barely registers.(3) Sitting at a nearby table, under a revolving mirror ball, Steve seems immune to such louche diversions.(4) The man was from Mexico, a London boy transplanted into a hot Hispanic city, where he was throwing away his brains and education on a louche life of nightclubs and restaurants.(5) He made no apologies for his rackety lifestyle, his liking for louche and even sleazy companions, his lavish consumption of cigars, brandy and champagne.(6) Their two-year courtship was spent among the Chelsea set - a fast group of bohemian artists and media types not averse to giving louche parties.(7) Somewhere between circus and living sculpture, it has the thrills and spills of the big top, the aesthetic sensibility of ballet and a hint of louche cabaret.(8) I was telling him about last night and he described me as sounding languid and louche , and consequently correctly guessed that I was still in bed.(9) The historically louche behaviour definitely has more charm.(10) Service was reasonably snappy, if occasionally louche , the prices were very reasonable given the size of the portions and the ambience was mixed and lively.(11) Sure enough, its reputation for unorthodoxy has gradually brought together a louche bunch of demented geniuses.(12) The tousled hair's intact, but, at 57, the formerly cherubic face is somewhat worn, making him look more louche than ever.(13) If you can't dance, stand at the bar and look louche .(14) ‘He's a wretch,’ says Amis in his familiar louche drawl, at its sneary best on such occasions, and perfect for them.(15) The spies on both sides are pretty louche characters, and espionage is portrayed as intimately bound up with military and business interests.(16) He was blond and good-looking, if a touch louche : a bit like a minor character out of PG Wodehouse, only with a Dublin accent.