Tom-and-Jerryish
Appearance
See also: Tom and Jerryish
English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Tom-and-Jerryish (comparative more Tom-and-Jerryish, superlative most Tom-and-Jerryish)
- Alternative form of Tom and Jerryish.
- 1981 May 3, Newgate Callendar [pseudonym; Harold Charles Schonberg], “Crime”, in The New York Times, page 39:
- The stories are amusing, well-written and Tom-and-Jerryish. Sir Charles, playing the cat, always loses, becoming more apoplectic each time.
- 1982 November 25, Kirk Honeycutt, “Heidi’s Song”, in North County Magazine (Times-Advocate), page 15:
- It is very sweet and sentimental, but fortunately has enough Tom-and-Jerryish slapstick violence to keep your teeth from grinding.
- 1991 May 17, Rene Carlos, “Not enough effects in ‘FX 2’”, in Chicago Tribune, 144th year, number 137, section 7, page K:
- It has nothing else going for it except a little slice of silly, Tom-and-Jerryish action.
- 1992 January 28, Ed Siegel, “Move over, Mickey”, in The Boston Globe, volume 241, number 28, pages 25 and 28:
- Bochco and the show’s writer-producer, Nat Mauldin, provide plenty of stuff for the kiddies as well: Animation that is closer to the feature-film than TV standard; Tom-and-Jerryish chase scenes; slaphappy characters and pratfally situations.
- 2019 January 19, Roger Boyes, “The prig versus the populist is a battle for Europe’s soul”, in The Times, page 34:
- Tom-and-Jerryish spats between Macron and Salvini over art, the euro and migrants feed into a clash for political domination of the Continent, argues Roger Boyes […] The confrontation between Emmanuel Macron, the French president, and Matteo Salvini, Italy’s deputy prime minister, may appear Tom-and-Jerryish but it is Europe’s argument made flesh, a gladiatorial struggle between global elites and insurgent politicians for the Continent’s future.