Gatsbyesque
English
WOTD – 10 April 2025
Etymology
From Gatsby + -esque (suffix meaning ‘resembling’ forming adjectives), from the surname of Jay Gatsby, the titular character of the novel The Great Gatsby (1925) by the American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /ˈɡætsbɪˌɛsk/, /ˌɡætsbɪˈɛsk/
Audio (General American): (file) - Rhymes: -ɛsk (one pronunciation)
- Hyphenation: Gats‧by‧esque
Adjective
Gatsbyesque (comparative more Gatsbyesque, superlative most Gatsbyesque)
- Suggestive of Jay Gatsby, the titular character of the novel The Great Gatsby (1925): enigmatic; extravagant; nouveau riche, etc.
- 1970 January 19, Julie Baumgold, “Carterandamanda: Learning the New York Lesson”, in Clay S[chuette] Felker, editor, New York, volume 3, number 3, New York, N.Y.: New York Media, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 27, column 3:
- And meanwhile there was in him [Carter Burden] a theatrical hunger; the Gatsbyesque demand: "I was very conscious of stars."
- 1980 May 19, Phil Ponebshek, “Battle for Berths to Britain”, in Charles L. Creesy, editor, Princeton Alumni Weekly, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 18, column 1:
- During the first half of the century, Princeton and Cornell joined forces every third and fourth years for home-and-away dual meets with the two English schools [Oxford University and Cambridge University]. It was a sort of Gatsbyesque ideal, featuring a long trip on a luxury liner, and a classic mile matchup between Jack Lovelock of Cambridge and Bill Bonthron '34 even produced a world mile record by the former.
- 1995, Tom Engelhardt, “X Marks the Spot”, in The End of Victory Culture: Cold War America and the Disillusioning of a Generation, New York, N.Y.: Basic Books, →ISBN, part II (Containments 1945–1962), page 92:
- There was a Gatsbyesque quality to this relatively poor Midwestern boy [George Frost Kennan] who recreated himself as an aristocratic, European-oriented, conservative member of America's leadership class yet never lost a sense of belonging.
- 2021, Amanda Frost, “Citizen Suffragist”, in You are Not American: Citizenship Stripping from Dred Scott to the Dreamers, Boston, Mass.: Beacon Press, →ISBN, page 80:
- A perpetual bachelor, his named popped up with some frequency in the society pages of the New York papers. Effortlessly, it seemed, Peter Gordon Mackenzie had propelled himself from a jute trader on a gloomy island in the Outer Hebrides to a life of Gatsbyesque splendor at the height of the Gilded Age.
Translations
|
Further reading
- Jay Gatsby on Wikipedia.Wikipedia