burlesque
burlesque 英 [bɜ:ˈlesk] 美 [bɜrˈlesk]
n. 作戏;滑稽戏 adj. 滑稽的;可笑的
进行时:burlesquing 过去式:burlesqued 过去分词:burlesqued 第三人称单数:burlesques 名词复数:burlesques
- In contemporary usage, burlesque is a playfully nostalgic form of striptease — think fans and feather boas rather than explicit nudity — but this is just the latest form of an ironic style of entertainment dating back to medieval times.
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- n. 作戏;滑稽戏
- adj. 滑稽的;可笑的
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1. He has played in several films, including Twilight, for which he was nominated for the Best Villain Award at the 2009 Scream Awards, burlesque, and Priest.
他曾出演过多部电影,其中有《暮色》,此片让他获得了2009年“尖叫奖”的最佳反派奖提名,《滑稽表演》,还有《圣徒》。
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2. "Because of events like these and the lowbrow art movement, and the burlesque world, I've seen the industry change," Patton says. "Figure models used to be very girl-next-door, plain Jane.
“从这样的活动和低俗艺术运动以及这个滑稽的世界中,我看到了产业的巨变,”巴顿说,“人体模特过去曾是一些邻家女孩:平凡的珍妮。
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3. Newly single Christina Aguilera appears on "Ellen" Friday to promote her new film, "burlesque," and she talks about the man in her life.
前不久刚离婚的克里斯汀娜·阿奎莱拉现身“艾伦”星期五节目中宣传新影片"滑稽戏",她还谈到了生活中的男人。
- burlesque (n.) 1660s, "piece composed in burlesque style, derisive imitation, grotesque parody," earlier as an adjective, "odd, grotesque" (1650s), from French burlesque (16c.), from Italian burlesco "ludicrous," from burla "joke, fun, mockery," possibly ultimately from Late Latin burra "trifle, nonsense," literally "flock of wool" (a word of unknown origin). The more precise adjectival meaning "tending to excite laughter by ludicrous contrast between the subject and the manner of treating it" is attested in English by 1700.
- burlesque (v.) "make ridiculous by mocking representation," 1670s, from burlesque (n.). Related: Burlesqued; burlesquing.
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