Tati
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cookie-cutter I've bumped into a phrase with a word cookie-cutter as an adjective (a musician is talking about writing songs): -If you try and chase that sort of success, you just end up making cookie-cutter records. I found in the dictionary that cookie-cutter means resembling many others of the same kind. My question is whether the word is neutral or slightly pejorative. And I'd be thankful for a couple more examples.
2011年12月18日 06:29
解答 · 6
1
The term implies that the songs are the same as many others.
2011年12月18日
As you guessed, cookie-cutter means the same thing -- structure, flavour, etc. It comes from the idea that a cookie cutter (the metal die used to shape cookies) makes the same thing every time, and there is no artistic appeal to something that anyone could just 'stamp out'. I hear this a lot with essays. The traditional five paragraph essay structure is considered cookie-cutter, since you just fill in facts and information. Typically you will see this phrase used with creation -- architecture, painting, music, film, television, writing, speech, etc. As for it being pejorative, yes, it is insulting to tell someone that their work is cookie-cutter, since you effectively tell them they did something anyone else could do. The example you have means that if you go at music only for the money, you will fail, because emotion, the part that the cookie cutter leaves out, is what truly fuels art.
2011年12月18日
The expression "cookie-cutter" is pejorative, indicating something with a lack of originality. "The homes in that area were only designed in cookie-cutter fashion". Or "the solution to the problem will not work in all cases, because they took a cookie-cutter approach".
2011年12月18日
cookie cutter : a kitchen utensil used to cut a sheet of cookie dough into desired shapes before baking. means your work is just like one down off a production line... as same as thousands of the same shape... and I think it's of course a bit pejorative
2011年12月18日
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