Dundreary
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the name of Lord Dundreary, a character in Tom Taylor's play Our American Cousin (1858).
Noun
[edit]Dundreary (plural Dundrearys or Dundrearies)
- (attributive) Describing types of fashion, hairstyles etc. associated with the foppish Lord Dundreary in Taylor's Our American Cousin. [from 19th c.]
- 1917, George Robert Sims, My Life:
- The shop windows were filled with Dundreary scarves, and Brother Sam scarves, and there were Dundreary collars and Dundreary shirts, and Dundrearyisms were on every lip.
- 1986, Sheelagh Kelly, For My Brother's Sins:
- ‘I shall, if I may claim the second dance,’ spoke up a young man with Dundreary whiskers.
- (obsolete) A person reminiscent of Lord Dundreary; a fop, a dandy. [19th–20th c.]
- (in the plural) Long, bushy sideburns. [from 19th c.]
- Synonym: Piccadilly weepers
- 2002, Josepth Roth, translated by Michael Hofmann, The Radetsky March, Folio Society, published 2015, page 221:
- All at once, the Emperor began to whistle. He really did purse his lips, the wings of his dundrearies moved a little closer together, and the Emperor whistled a tune, a familiar, if somewhat distorted tune.
Derived terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Lord Dundreary on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Our American Cousin on Wikipedia.Wikipedia