Cinderella
See also: cinderella
English
editAlternative forms
edit- (common noun): cinderella
Etymology
editFrom cinder + -ella, as in little cinder girl. Compare French Cendrillon.
Pronunciation
edit- IPA(key): /ˌsɪndəˈɹɛlə/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- Rhymes: -ɛlə
Proper noun
editCinderella (plural Cinderellas)
- A popular fairy tale embodying a classic folk tale myth-element of unjust oppression and triumphant reward.
- The main character in this story, a mistreated and impoverished girl.
- 1988 May 16, Melissa Merlie, “Dancing the night away”, in Chillicothe Gazette, volume 189, number 39, Chillicothe, Ohio, page 1B, column 2:
- The girls look like Southern belles or Cinderellas. The prom’s theme is Cinderellian: “Until Midnight.” Little, clear slippers sit on the 30 cloth- and candle-covered tables on the tarp-covered gymnasium floor.
- 2014, Kathryn Harrison, Joan of Arc: A Life Transfigured, Doubleday, →ISBN:
- Womanly duties, as Joan thought of them, were fine for girls who imagined themselves as Cinderellas or Sleeping Beauties, good girls rewarded for menial housework and, in the case of Sleeping Beauty, a passivity so profound it was deaf, dumb, blind, and comatose.
- 2018, Jen Kim, Love and…: Bad Boys, “The One” & Other Fun Ways to Sabotage Your Relationship, Skyhorse Publishing, →ISBN:
- All the miniature Cinderellas, Belles, and Ariels who fill the streets every Halloween are essentially paying homage to characters that will slowly and inevitably chip away at their sense of worth in years to come.
- (rare) A female given name originating as a coinage.
Derived terms
editterms derived from Cinderella
Translations
editfairy tale
|
main character in this fairy tale
|
Noun
editCinderella (plural Cinderellas)
- (by analogy) A mistreated and impoverished girl.
- (attributive) Something rising unexpectedly from obscurity to success, as a Cinderella team.
- (attributive) Something neglected and denied resources, as a Cinderella service.
- Cinderella State (in Australia)
- 2020 January 2, David Clough, “How InterCity came back from the brink”, in Rail, page 64:
- A very early example of this can be seen in the case of the Midland Main Line (MML). At the start of 1982, this was the Cinderella of the InterCity portfolio but building more High Speed Trains (HSTs) to replace 90mph trainsets was out of the question. During 1982-83, Bleasdale shuffled his HST pack by taking sets from the Eastern and Western Regions and allocated these to the MML.
- (attributive, informal, colloquial) A procedure or surgery to reshape the feet.
- 2014 April 22, Laren Stover, “Make Them Fit, Please!”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 2014-09-14:
- For Dr. Sadrieh (who was wearing made-to-order Gucci brogues), foot surgery is a fusion of medicine and fairy tale. At his practice, you don’t have a bunionectomy; you have a Cinderella procedure.
- 2020, Robert Wainwright, Enid: The Scandalous High-society Life of the Formidable 'Lady Killmore', Allen & Unwin, page 125:
- By the mid-1930s prominent members of society, including the aristocracy, were paying hefty fees for this Cinderella surgery, correcting double chins, reshaping noses and smoothing wrinkles and creases, even having stomach tucks.
- (philately) A stamp or stamp-like label issued for purposes other than postal administration, not issued by a central government, or not listed in most general catalogues.
- (rare, derogatory) A woman employed to clean, especially to remove ash from stoves and fireplaces.
References
edit- L. N. and M. Williams, Cinderella Stamps, London, Heinemann, 1970
Further reading
edit- Cinderella on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Cinderella portal on Wikisource.Wikisource
- “Cinderella”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
Categories:
- English 4-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/ɛlə
- Rhymes:English/ɛlə/4 syllables
- English lemmas
- English proper nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English terms with rare senses
- English given names
- English female given names
- English female given names from coinages
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with usage examples
- English informal terms
- English colloquialisms
- en:Philately
- English derogatory terms
- English eponyms
- en:Brothers Grimm
- en:Fairy tale characters
- en:Fairy tales
- en:Fictional characters
- en:People