sardoodledom
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Named after French dramatist Victorien Sardou + doodle + -dom, coined by Irish playwright, critic, and polemicist George Bernard Shaw who first used it on the 1 June, 1895 in the Saturday Review when criticising Sardou's well-made plays.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sɑː(ɹ)ˈduːdəldəm/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Noun
sardoodledom (uncountable)
- (uncommon) Well-made works of drama that have trivial, insignificant, or melodramatic plots.
- 2010 [1946], Eric Bentley, The Playwright as a Thinker: A Study of Drama in Modern Times, 4th edition, University of Minnesota Press, →ISBN, page 34:
- What is new is that we have in movies an art form so exclusively given over to Sardoodledom that a Yale professor thinks that Sardoodledom is ingrained in the celluloid.
Further reading
- Michael Quinion (1996–2024) “Sardoodledom”, in World Wide Words.
- OED 2nd edition 1989
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