curlicue
English
Alternative forms
Noun
curlicue (plural curlicues)
- A fancy twisting or curling shape usually made from a series of spirals and loops.
- 1917, Christopher Morley, chapter 3, in Parnassus on Wheels, New York, N.Y.: Grosset & Dunlap Publishers, →OCLC:
- I put in plenty of curlicues after the figures so that no one could raise the check into $400,000; then I got out my old rattan suit case and put in some clothes.
- 1917, Anna Alice Chapin, Greenwich Village, page 45:
- There was not the slightest use in trying to make its twisty curlicue streets conform to any engineering plan on earth; so those sensible old-time folk didn't try.
- 2015 August 6, Leslie Felperin, “The Diary of a Teenage Girl review – a scaldingly honest coming-of-age comedy”, in The Guardian:
- (Curlicue hand-drawn cartoons blossom frequently throughout, touching base with the source material’s distinctive visual style while adding an aptly hallucinogenic vibe when required.)
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
curlicue (third-person singular simple present curlicues, present participle curlicuing, simple past and past participle curlicued)
- (transitive and intransitive) To make or adorn (something) with curlicues, or as if with curlicues.
- 1963, J P Donleavy, A Singular Man, published 1963 (USA), pages 231–232:
- A chandelier the shape of an anchor, hanging over Smith's head as he passed out through this vestibule. Walls curlicued with comb marks of some fancy plasterer.
- 1992, Donna Tartt, The Secret History:
- I was looking, obliquely, at Bunny slumped over his bowl when all of a sudden, in the window behind his head, I saw the distant figure of Mr. Hatch, walking across the open field beyond the garden, carrying the dark, curlicued ruins of the Malacca chair to the rubbish heap.
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