English edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

kiss and cry

  1. (idiomatic, figure skating, sometimes hyphenated (especially when used attributively)) The publicly viewable enclosure in which figure skaters sit immediately after a performance, while they await and receive the judging results.
    • 1994 Feb. 24, Mike Rowbottom, "Winter Olympics / Ice Skating," The Independent (UK) (retrieved 201 Feb 2014):
      Harding had seemed physically discomfited earlier as she awaited her marks in the kiss and cry corner.
    • 2001 October 23, Mark Starr, “Starr Gazing: Kwan's Big Breakup”, in Newsweek, retrieved 21 February 2014:
      The seating area where skaters wait for the judges' scores is called the "kiss and cry" for good reason.
    • 2010 February 21, Juliet Macur, “After Skating, a Unique Olympic Event: Crying”, in New York Times, retrieved 21 February 2014:
      With cameras in their faces, figure skaters awaiting their scores in the kiss-and-cry area offer a scene unlike any other.
    • 2014 February 8, “Canadian pairs finish second in free skate, but Russia leads by 6 in team event”, in Winnipeg Free Press, Canada, retrieved 21 February 2014:
      The deafening crowd . . . chanted and stomped their feet when Stolbova and Klimov came on the ice and Canada's pairs skaters were still sitting in the kiss and cry waiting for their scores.

References edit