Tarzanian
English
Etymology
Adjective
Tarzanian (comparative more Tarzanian, superlative most Tarzanian)
- Of, relating to, or in the style of the fictional character Tarzan; having the physique or abilities of Tarzan.
- 1922 September 23, Country Life, London, page 381, column 2:
- “Cocktail Sar” is a breathless tale of midnight gambling, in the white moonlight of tropical nights in Batavia, and “Kadiamar” is a well turned protest against Tarzanian fiction.
- 1924, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan and the Ant-Men, Chicago: A.C. McClurg, page 130:
- How was this little girl going to accomplish the theft of the diamonds from the huge, Tarzanian Spaniard?
- 1999 October 1, “Modern-day Tarzan discovers two paths to Sydney gold”, in Sydney Morning Herald, page 40:
- Dan Schumacher has not indicated an ambition to flex his biceps in action flicks when he hangs up his togs but he, too, is set to complete the extraordinary Tarzanian double of Olympic water polo and gold medals in the pool.
Noun
Tarzanian (plural Tarzanians)
- A person with or exhibiting Tarzanian attributes.
- 1971, Tommy Bolt with Jimmy Mann, The Hole Truth, Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., page 43:
- Golfers, I repeat, may not be as physically endowed as the tarzanians of other sports.
- 1991, Norman Mailer, Harlot's Ghost, New York: Random House, page 1055:
- Those same Green Berets who so captivated your pen were among the invited, and about twenty of us well-dressed guests were treated to a dozen of those fatuous if strapping young studs jet-popping ten feet above the croquet sward, while others—Tarzanians, I call them—were swinging on ropes from tree to tree.
- 2005, David C. Meek, The Tarzan Club, West Conshohocken, PA: Infinity Publishing, page 11:
- Tarzanians grew ever more adventuresome with circular patterns and drops to the ground behind the bushes.
Translations
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