penny-dreadfulish
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From penny dreadful + -ish.
Adjective
[edit]penny-dreadfulish (comparative more penny-dreadfulish, superlative most penny-dreadfulish)
- Resembling or characteristic of a penny dreadful.
- 1913, Doris Egerton Jones, Pied Piper, George W. Jacobs & Company, page 254:
- She has been quite penny-dreadfulish-sword-and-mask mysterious lately; she goes about with her lips pursed up and a sparkle in her eye.
- 1936, Barnaby Ross, Drury Lane's Last Case, republished, March 1946, as by Ellery Queen, Little, Brown, page 250:
- But if Sedlar and Ales aren't the same, then there's only one conclusion to come to: they bear an uncanny resemblance to each other! We've been evading that conclusion because it seems—er—pulpy and penny-dreadfulish; but you can't get around it.
- 2009 October 22, Jan Stuart, “Fiction Chronicle”, in The New York Times:
- "Dracula the Un-Dead” forsakes the epistolary format of its forebear in favor of a penny-dreadfulish narrative pitting the first book’s surviving characters against a monomaniacal vampire countess.