Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
Kuvat 15

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenUS
  • GA:
    • IPA: /ˈflæpɚ/
KieliKäännökset
italiamaschietta
ranskagarçonne

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. (colloquial, historical) A young girl usually between the ages of 15 and 18, especially one not "out" socially.
  2. One who or that which flaps.
  3. (climbing) Any injury that results in a loose flap of skin on the fingers, making gripping difficult.
  4. (colloquial, chiefly historical) A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum or displaying daring freedom or boldness; now particularly associated with the Jazz Age of the 1920s.
  5. (hunting) A young game bird just able to fly, particularly a wild duck.
  6. A flipper; a limb of a turtle, which functions as a flipper or paddle when swimming.
  7. (plumbing) A flapper valve.
  8. (slang) The hand.

Esimerkit

  • I paid violent and unusual attention to a flapper all through the meal in order to make you jealous.
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald is best known as a chronicler of the 1920s and as the writer who, more than any other, identified, delineated, and popularized the female representative of that era, the flapper. Though it is an overstatement to say that Fitzgerald created the flapper, he did, with considerable assistance from his wife Zelda, offer the public an image of a young woman who was spoiled, sexually liberated, self-centered, fun-loving, and magnetic.[...]Although she is often seen now as a mere fashion of the bygone Jazz Age, the flapper should be regarded as one of the great authentic characters in American history.
  • Among McPherson's most passionate and visible advocates were Southern California's young flappers, who turned out in droves to cheer on the evangelist. While most fundamentalists vehemently criticized flappers, viewing them as symbols of moral decay and the decline of Victorian gender identities, McPherson had embraced them. Critics of her Bible college identified the young female ministers with whom she surrounded herself not as holdouts to Victorianism, but as outright flappers. The press even dubbed one of McPherson's most successful young protégés the flapper evangelist.
  • The flapper of a porpoise.
  • It was still too shallow for the turtle to swim, but it used its four flappers with so much effect against its two assailants, as to give them a thorough shower-bath.

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkoflappers

(colloquial, chiefly historical) A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum or displaying daring freedom or boldness; now particularly associated with the Jazz Age of the 1920s.

Actress Louise Brooks (1927)

(colloquial, chiefly historical) A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum or displaying daring freedom or boldness; now particularly associated with the Jazz Age of the 1920s.

A flapper on a ship (1929)

(colloquial, chiefly historical) A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum or displaying daring freedom or boldness; now particularly associated with the Jazz Age of the 1920s.

Violet Romer in a flapper dress c. 1915