Citations:freakazoid

English citations of freakazoid

Adjective: "(slang) freaky"

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1990 1996 1997 1998 2000 2004 2007 2009 2010
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  • 1985, "Vanities," Vanity Fair, January 1985, p. 11 [emphasis in source]
    Along with to-die-for humpiness, Miami Vice is educational—a recognized vocabulary builder. "You can't put me in the same cell with that three-hundred-pound freakazoid!"
  • 1990, Joan E. Rigdon, "See Spot Appeal: A Condemned Dog Bites Back in Court", The Wall Street Journal, 24 October 1990:
    Mr. Mannon testified that Spot is "100% friendly" as long as no one hits him with sticks or does other "freakazoid" things.
  • 1991, The Editors of The Harvard Lampoon, A Harvard Education in a Book, Perigee Books (1991), →ISBN, page 145
    And, God, it feels good to be wearing that get-up, walking around looking spaced, muttering all this freakazoid stuff that nobody understands, and just knowing that everyone who sees you is thinking, "Jesus shit! Brilliance!"
  • 1996, M. Tye Comer, Paradise Don't Come Cheap review, CMJ New Music Monthly, September 1996:
    That leaves these freakazoid crossbreeds to traverse the aural wasteland that divides King Tee from King Crimson.
  • 1997, Carsten Stroud, Deadly Force: In the Streets with The U. S. Marshals, Bantam Books (1997), →ISBN, page 184:
    So far, coverage of the issue had been relegated to fringe publications such as Soldier of Fortune and a number of freakazoid web sites on the Internet.
  • 1998, Zane, Addicated, Atria Books (2003), →ISBN, pages 113-114:
    She was being extraordinarily friendly, and I began to wonder whether she had been feenin' all week, anxiously awaiting to hear about the sexual escapades of the freakazoid slut she had as a new client.
  • 2000, Julie Kistler, Just a Little Fling, Harlequin (2000), →ISBN, page 96:
    Some cross-dressing freakazoid friend who stayed over in Lucie's guest room?
  • 2004, Barb Huff, On Tour: The Songwriter, Barbour Publishing (2004), →ISBN, page 93:
    He was really cool about that, but then again, wouldn't freakazoid stalker fans think it's cool that I would tell them that?
  • 2007, Kimberly L. Bonnell, My Story, My Truth, AuthorHouse (2007), →ISBN, page 36:
    His hair was spiked with thin wrap around freakazoid sunglasses on, a white beard that was shaving cream, and beaded necklaces strung on him everywhere!
  • 2009, Darlene Ryan, Five Minutes More, Orca Book Publishers (2009), →ISBN, page 102:
    He starts to do some freakazoid dance right there on the sidewalk, kind of hopping from one foot to the other, punching his arms up in the air and bopping his head from side to side with his eyes closed.
  • 2010, Lindsay Faith Rech, It Started With a Dare, Graphia (2010), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    "I mean, what kind of freakazoid perv would go stalking women half his age over the Internet?"

Noun: "(slang) a freaky person or creature; a freak"

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1992 1994 1997 1998 2000 2001 2002 2006 2007 2008 2009
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1992, Marty Noble, "With New Kidney, Hearn Is Out of Baseball, but Not Life", Los Angeles Times, 16 August 1992:
    Even at night, when he's connected to those machines, when the apparatus cleansing his blood and providing oxygen make him look like "some freakazoid," he's certain this is better than what might have been.
  • 1994, Louis Theroux, "Michael Jackson, Doo-Doo Head", Spy, July/August 1994:
    But of the more serious allegation — being a total freakazoid — Jacko seems guilty as charged.
  • 1997, James Patterson, Cat & Mouse, Little, Brown & Company (1997), →ISBN, page 300:
    "Oh, Simon Says is definitely a world-class freakazoid. He was high on my Unabomber list at one time. Has an alibi for the night Alex was attacked."
  • 1998, Danzy Senna, Caucasia, Riverhead Books (1998), →ISBN, page 220:
    "Yeah, the fuckin' freakazoid."
  • 2000, Peter Rainer, "Great X-pectations", New York, 24 July 2000:
    The appeal of the comic book, and, in a darker and more voluptuous way, of the movie, is that it celebrates being a freakazoid.
  • 2001, Francis DiPietro, Holland & Bonni, Writers Club Press (2001), →ISBN, page 22:
    “...psychotic, schizomaniac fuckin' freakazoid,” Bonni finished, then added, “Small tits too.”
  • 2001, Mack Maloney, Star Hawk: Planet America, Ace Books (2001), →ISBN, page 134:
    "But he is so not a freakazoid," she whispered. "Wait till you see him."
  • 2002, Craig Froelich, Tyranena, Writers Club Press (2002), →ISBN, page 250:
    “Are we going to let some freakazoid keep us hostage in our own town? []
  • 2006, Mark Arsenault, Gravewriter, Thomas Dunne Books (2006), →ISBN, page 136:
    What director would have cast a bug-eyed freakazoid like Peter Shadd in the role of defendant?
  • 2006, Elizabeth Flock, Everything Must Go, MIRA (2006), →ISBN, page 22:
    "I don't want a freakazoid for a younger brother, that's why," Brad said.
  • 2006, Cathie Linz, Good Girls Do, Berkley Sensation (2006), →ISBN, page 161:
    "Because the other kids break in and steal stuff. They think I'm a freakazoid."
  • 2008, Jacquelyn Mitchard, The Midnight Twins, Razorbill (2008), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    “Do you promise to shut up if we find out he's a freakazoid who likes to kill animals and set fires?” Mally shot back.
  • 2009, Phil Villarreal, Secrets of a Stingy Scoundrel: 100 Dirty Little Money-Grubbing Secrets, Skyhorse Publishing (2009), →ISBN, page 40:
    Either you take her to a boys basketball game and look like a loser who's trying to relive his scant former athletic glory, or you go to a girls game and look like a kid-ogling freakazoid.