释义 |
slapstick I. \ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷\ noun Etymology: slap (II) + stick 1. a. : a device consisting of two flat pieces of wood fastened together at one end but loose at the other and sometimes used by an actor in farce to make a loud noise in simulation of a severe blow b. : any of several similar devices: as (1) : two flat pieces of leather sewed together, weighted at the hitting end, and used as a club (2) : a stick hinged on one side to the top of a slate and clapped against the top to mark on a sound track the beginning of a movie take 2. a. : comedy that depends for its effect on fast, boisterous, and zany physical activity and horseplay (as the throwing of pies, the whacking of posteriors with a slapstick, chases, mugging) often accompanied by broad obvious rowdy verbal humor < relies heavily on slapstick. Rosalind is trapped in the slats of a venetian blind, spanked by an exploding engine part in a hot-rod race, nearly strangled in an electric fan — Time > < the extravagant slapstick comedy used by English pantomimists — M.E.McIntosh > b. : humor, language, or activity like that in slapstick comedy < humor that ranges from arrant slapstick to satire — Newsweek > < an exuberance and colloquial vigor that often only just stop short of slapstick — F.W.Bateson > 3. : a flat strip of wood upon which an abrasive (as a piece of emery paper) is fixed for use in polishing or finishing work II. adjective : of, relating to, or having the characteristics of slapstick < slapstick comedy > < slapstick humor > < a slapstick style > < his extravagant slapstick English — B.D.Wolfe > |