From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbohemianbo‧he‧mi‧an /bəʊˈhiːmiən, bə- $ boʊ-, bə-/ adjective SSSTYLE/ELEGANCEliving in a very informal or relaxed way and not accepting society’s rules of behaviour bohemian cafés frequented by artists, musicians, and actors —bohemian noun [countable]
Examples from the Corpus
bohemian• He was never merely flamboyant or vulgarly bohemian.• Might as well look the part, since all artists were considered crazy and bohemian.• I could browse bohemian bookstores in far-off, mysterious Hollywood.• In the 1960s, a second wave of immigrants settled here, along with a thriving bohemian community.• The tourist resort threatens to change Key West's bohemian culture.• It seemed a veritable model of bohemian family life.• Cops would tell us to go home, and that intensified this bohemian romance all the more.• The bohemian squalor that greeted my eyes was quite appealing.Origin bohemian (1800-1900) Bohemian “of Bohemia, area and former country in the Czech Republic”; because of an association between Bohemia and traveling artists and gypsies