cosplay
English edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Japanese コスプレ (kosupure), which is a clipping of コスチュームプレイ (kosuchūmu purei), from a compound of English costume + play.
Pronunciation edit
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈkɒz.pleɪ/, /ˈkɒs.pleɪ/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - (US) IPA(key): /ˈkɑz.pleɪ/, /ˈkɑs.pleɪ/, (hyperforeign) /ˌkoʊˈspleɪ/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun edit
cosplay (countable and uncountable, plural cosplays)
- (uncountable) The art or practice of costuming oneself as a (usually fictional) character.
- 2003, Cosplay Girls: Japan's Live Animation Heroines:
- Men, of course, also participate in cosplay and all its attending events, but women make up the greater numbers.
- 2006, Frenchy Lunning, Mechademia 1: Emerging Worlds of Anime And Manga, page 75:
- The environments and spaces created for and by cosplay provide cosplayers with a variety of spaces for social interactions.
- 2010, Antonia Levi, Mark McHarry, Dru Pagliassotti, Boys' Love Manga, page 5:
- It didn't take long for anime cons and cosplay to become a part of popular culture fandom in the West […]
- (countable) A skit or instance of this art or practice.
- 2010, Sarah Lynne Bowman, The Functions of Role-playing Games, page 29:
- Central to the activity of cosplay is elaborate costuming, though some cosplays are enacted using a game system.
- 2010, Anne Cooper-Chen, Cartoon Cultures: The Globalization of Japanese Popular Media, page 121:
- According to a student from France who went to Japan to study Japanese, "Universities in France are like Halloween when otaku students engage in these cosplays. They take Japanese language because of anime, but they see after a few classes that it's hard and not fun. Many drop out" (author interview, 2009).
- 2012, Dan Hunter, Ramon Lobato, Megan Richardson, Amateur Media: Social, cultural and legal perspectives:
- Popular cosplays include, for example, characters from the Final Fantasy range of games […]
Coordinate terms edit
Translations edit
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Verb edit
cosplay (third-person singular simple present cosplays, present participle cosplaying, simple past and past participle cosplayed)
- (intransitive) To costume oneself as a character.
- She cosplayed at the manga convention.
- 2022 December 23, Marina Hyde, “Who can doubt the futuristic brilliance of Sunak and co? They’ve given us driverless government”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Senior politicians have cosplayed as train drivers, ambulance workers, Border Force officials – the list goes on.
- (transitive) To costume oneself as (a character).
- She cosplayed Sailor Moon at the manga convention.
- (figurative, often derogatory, transitive) To adopt the behavior and mannerisms of another.
- 2022 May 30, Rebecca Solnit, “US mass shootings will continue until the majority can overrule the minority”, in The Guardian[3]:
- […] turning conservative white men into amateur commandos cosplaying war wherever they liked and the US into a war zone.
- 2022 August 27, Drachinifel, 2:44 from the start, in Type 1936A / Narvik class - Guide 298[4], archived from the original on 29 August 2022:
- Whilst their stability was generally an improvement on earlier German destroyers, as the vessels no longer displayed a strong desire to cosplay as U-boats, the main armament proved to be something of a problem.
Coordinate terms edit
Derived terms edit
Descendants edit
- → Norwegian: cosplay
- → Portuguese: cosplay
- → Russian: коспле́й (kospléj)
- → Spanish: cosplay
- → Thai: คอสเพลย์ (kɔ́ɔs-plee)
- → Ukrainian: коспле́й (kospléj)
Translations edit
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See also edit
Further reading edit
Anagrams edit
Norwegian Bokmål edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from English cosplay.
Noun edit
cosplay n (definite singular cosplayet, indefinite plural cosplay, definite plural cosplaya or cosplayene)
Related terms edit
- cosplaye (verb)
Norwegian Nynorsk edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from English cosplay.
Noun edit
cosplay n (definite singular cosplayet, indefinite plural cosplay, definite plural cosplaya)
Related terms edit
- cosplaya (verb)
Polish edit
Etymology edit
Unadapted borrowing from English cosplay.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
cosplay m inan (related adjective cosplayowy)
- cosplay (art or practice of costuming oneself as a (usually fictional) character)
Declension edit
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | cosplay |
genitive | cosplayu |
dative | cosplayowi |
accusative | cosplay |
instrumental | cosplayem |
locative | cosplayu |
vocative | cosplayu |
Related terms edit
Further reading edit
- cosplay at Obserwatorium językowe Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Portuguese edit
Etymology edit
Unadapted borrowing from English cosplay.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
cosplay m or f (uncountable)
Quotations edit
For quotations using this term, see Citations:cosplay.
Related terms edit
Spanish edit
Etymology edit
Unadapted borrowing from English cosplay.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
cosplay m (plural cosplays)