copycat
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Originally American English, from copy + cat (“former derogatory term for a person”).
Noun
[edit]copycat (plural copycats)
- (informal, derogatory) One who imitates or plagiarizes others' work. [from late 19th c.]
- 1899 July, Robert Grant, “Letter to a young man wishing to be an American”, in Scribner's Magazine[1], volume 26:
- And in it all they are merely copy-cats—servile followers of the aristocratic creed, but without the genuine prestige of the old-time nobilities.
- 1921, Gene Stratton-Porter, Her Father's Daughter[2]:
- I wanted to make them brilliant. I wanted to make them interesting. And of course I could not do it by myself. I am nothing but a copycat. I just quoted a lot of things I had heard you say; and I did worse than that, Peter.
- A criminal who imitates the crimes of another; specifically, a criminal who commits the same crime, especially a highly-publicized one, that has just or recently been committed by someone else.
- a copycat strangler
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]one who imitates or plagiarizes others' work
|
Adjective
[edit]copycat (comparative more copycat, superlative most copycat)
- Imitative; unoriginal.
- copycat crime
- 1998 July, Robert D. Kaplan, quoting Alex Villa, “Travels Into America's Future”, in The Atlantic[3]:
- “Because of my size, I was a natural leader in junior high school. Gangs are the most copycat of subcultures. It used to be zoot suits; now it's tattoos. When I was thirteen, I got a tattoo.”
- 1997, Daniel Miller, Capitalism: an ethnographic approach:
- As one executive put it: Now in the beverage market we are to a great extent very copycat.
- 2009, Alan Cole, Fathering your father: the Zen of fabrication in Tang Buddhism:
- It was that very copycat kind of "grandfather stealing" that makes Jinjue's text look like the son of Du Fei's Record, even as it works to push Du Fei's "father-text" out of the way.
- 2012 December 19, Zeynep Tufekci, “The Media Needs to Stop Inspiring Copycat Murders. Here's How.”, in The Atlantic[4]:
- We need to figure out how to balance the public interest in learning about a mass shooting with the public interest in reducing copycat crime.
- 2023 July 6, Dan Milmo, quoting Mark Zuckerberg, “Zuckerberg uses Threads to say Twitter has missed its chance”, in The Guardian[5], →ISSN:
- The chief executive and founder of Meta used his new Threads account to say Twitter had not “nailed” its opportunity to become a mega app and that his copycat version would be “focusing on kindness”.
Verb
[edit]copycat (third-person singular simple present copycats, present participle copycatting, simple past and past participle copycatted)
- To act as a copycat; to copy in a shameless or derivative way. [from early 20th c.]
- 1910, Gouverneur Morris, “Targets”, in The Spread Eagle and Other Stories[6]:
- Because beasts don't talk with words, they talk with sounds, and I copycatted my language from beasts and birds […]
- 2007 September 3, Janet Maslin, “His Girl Friday Meets a Sadistically Chic Serial Killer”, in New York Times[7]:
- In a genre that is rife with copycatting, Ms. Cain deserves some credit for having gotten a potentially interesting new series off the ground.
Translations
[edit]to copy in a derivative way
|
Further reading
[edit]- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “copycat”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
- “copycat”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
French
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from English copycat.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]copycat m (plural copycats)
Categories:
- English compound terms
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English informal terms
- English derogatory terms
- English terms with quotations
- English terms with usage examples
- English adjectives
- English terms with collocations
- English verbs
- en:People
- French terms borrowed from English
- French unadapted borrowings from English
- French terms derived from English
- French 3-syllable words
- French terms with IPA pronunciation
- French terms with audio pronunciation
- French lemmas
- French nouns
- French countable nouns
- French masculine nouns