vanillafy
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]vanillafy (third-person singular simple present vanillafies, present participle vanillafying, simple past and past participle vanillafied)
- (informal, transitive) To make generic, tame, or anodyne.
- 2001 January 1, Matthew Kalesh, “A Feast for the Senses”, in Gifts & Decorative Accessories:
- In Carver's words, the interior had been "vanillafied" into a colorless muddle that, while perhaps fitting for a modern pharmacy, was not the right kind of environment for a store that emphasized beauty and sensuality.
- 2012, Guy Adams, Sherlock: The Casebook, BBC Books, →ISBN, page 29:
- 'We like our heroes to be complex,' he [Benedict Cumberbatch] continues. 'We don't like two-dimensional stereotypes. They don't last very long. Also, for an actor, it's a lot more fun to play someone who has shape and edge than someone who has been softened and "vanillafied".
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:vanillafy.