Title card of the first Merrie Melodies short, "Lady, Play Your Mandolin!", produced in 1931 by Leon Schlesinger Productions for Warner Brothers.
Foxy, an expy of Mickey Mouse.

English edit

Etymology 1 edit

Noun edit

expy (plural expys)

  1. Contraction of expressway.

Etymology 2 edit

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From a clipping of exported character +‎ -y.[1] Coined by TV Tropes in 2006.

Noun edit

expy (plural expys or expies)

  1. (fandom slang) A character in a work of fiction who is a stand-in for or knockoff of a character from an unrelated work or of a real person.
    I like your novel but your protagonist is pretty clearly a Scooby-Doo expy.
    • 2014, Jonathon O'Donnell, “Our Demonic World”, in Robert Arp, editor, The Devil and Philosophy: The Nature of His Game[1], page 120:
      The demon-run Raptor News Network clearly parodies that of the American conservative Fox News Network in both rhetoric and appearance, with its anchorman Bob Barbas being a thinly veiled expy of Bill O’Reilly.
    • 2018 February 27, Amy Nash, “You should be watching Monster Factory”, in Concrete, University of East Anglia, page 21:
      The monsters vary from completely original creations to bizarre expies of famous characters and people, []
    • 2019 March 1, Robin Wilde, “The 1990s: A Decade of Adventure”, in Forge Press, University of Sheffield, page 36:
      [] Thimbleweed Park is an obvious X Files parody with direct expies of Mulder and Scully as protagonists, so a 1990s setting is the natural choice []
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:expy.
Related terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hillary Busis, "'Mad Men': Bob Benson is the new Don Draper", Entertainment Weekly, 20 December 2019

Anagrams edit