Join two wayward radio hosts on A Way With Words, the call-in radio show about writing, speaking, slang, old sayings, and more.
Catchword for “jukebox musical”
Catchword: jukebox musical
Filed Under: , ,
Part of Speechn.
The part of speech reflects that used in the full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: Another jukebox musical—revive someone else’s plot (in this case Shakespeare’s Tempest and a forgotten MGM sci-fi movie of the 1950s), punctuate it with feel-good songs from the 1960s, and disguise the thin idea.
Article or Document Title:
“Enthusiasm Can’t Save This Musical”
Author:
D. Partridge
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
Courier-Mail
Publishing Location:
Australia
Date of Publication:
Feb. 1, 1993
This cite belongs to a full entry for jukebox musical.
Recent Catchwords
toke n. (5/22)
high speed adj. (5/22)
push-button adj. (5/22)
bite v. (5/21)
polocrosse n. (5/21)
rambler n. (5/21)
phlashing n. (5/20)
laborshed n. (5/20)
tofu building n. (5/20)
looner n. (5/20)
God shot n. (5/20)
burpless adj. (5/19)
pink-sheeter n. (5/19)
meat glue n. (5/19)
shed n. (5/19)
tail swallowing n. (5/19)
bottom fisher n. (5/19)
wrench time n. (5/19)
low speed adj. (5/18)
 More catchwords...
Sponsored links:
New Comments
Helen Friedman commented on never event (5/22)
DJ Kizzel commented on robotripping (5/22)
renee moberg commented on Throckmorton sign (5/21)
mighty red pen commented on burpless (5/21)
Walter Bjorneby commented on water buffalo (5/20)
Luke commented on burpless (5/19)
Charlie Cloud commented on big boy rules (5/18)
EVe Young commented on whale eye (5/18)
j.L. Clin commented on nakation (5/18)
Cris Whetton commented on radwaste (5/17)
Jose F. Lacaba commented on water buffalo (5/17)
GW commented on güey (5/16)
Jak King commented on hardening off (5/16)
Jay DeKing commented on hardening off (5/15)
C.L.Mangles commented on job and knock (5/13)
Subscribe to the RSS feed.Subscribe to the mailing list.Browse the archive.Add to Technorati Favorites. © 1999-2008 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Dictionary, New York City.