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Definition 2024


bizarro

bizarro

English

Adjective

bizarro (comparative more bizarro, superlative most bizarro)

  1. (slang) Bizarre, unsettling, creepy.
  2. (slang) Being the opposite or logical inverse of a familiar object or person.
    • 2010, Robin Wasserman, Candy Apple #25: Wish You Were Here, Liza, Scholastic Inc. (ISBN 9780545282963), page 23
      In some alternate, bizarro universe, there was probably a bizarro Kirsten who was totally awesome. Bizarro Kirsten gave bizarro Dillie and bizarro Liza awesome makeovers and awesome advice and let them stay up after hours eating awesome snacks and watching awesome late-night TV.
    • 2013, Andrew Shaw-Kitch, Structure, Seinfeld, and Play, Lulu.com (ISBN 9781300898610)
      This then leads to Elaine's entrance into what Jerry describes as a “Bizarro world,” citing the Superman concept, in which all of the facets of the show as we know it, especially its principle[sic] characters, are reproduced in some way backward.
    • 2010, Gershon Hepner, Legal Friction: Law, Narrative, and Identity Politics in Biblical Israel, Peter Lang (ISBN 9780820474625), page 618
      Egypt is a Bizarro-Canaan, looking as Canaan might look seen through Alice's looking glass. It shows the Judeans how a country should not be run.
    • 2012, Danny Katch, America's Got Democracy: The Making of the World's Longest-Running Reality Show, Haymarket Books (ISBN 9781608462988)
      When the occupation began, Jon Stewart called it “the Bizarro Tea Party,” which is funny because it's the Tea Party—billionaires organizing mad-as-**** rallies against working-class programs—that is a bizarro version of a genuine grassroots protest movement.
  3. Pertaining to bizarro fiction.
    • 2010, Caris O'Malley, The Egg Said Nothing, Caris O'Malley (ISBN 9781936383269), page 97
      An incredibly fucked-up parody of B-horror movies with a bizarro slant.

Noun

bizarro (plural bizarros)

  1. weirdo, misfit
    • 1997, Harold Schechter, The Manly Movie Guide, Boulevard (ISBN 9781572973084)
      Often described as "the Citizen Kane of dismemberment movies," this cult-movie masterpiece set the standards for the "bizarros-who-turn-their-home-into-a-human-slaughterhouse" horror genre.
    • 2008, Cindy Gerard, Whisper No Lies, Simon and Schuster (ISBN 9781416566953), page 1
      Showgirl breasts and round hips that swayed to a sultry beat when she walked and drew heartbreakers and bizarros from the four corners of the earth.
    • 2009, Martin Drapkin, Now and at the Hour, Dog Ear Publishing (ISBN 9781608440788), page 1
      BOOM!, he can't walk, can't talk, he's in a ward at a state institution with thirty retarded bizarros, many of them bizzare [...]
  2. (uncountable) Bizarro fiction.
    • 2006, Carlton Mellick, Jeremy Robert Johnson, The Bizarro Starter Kit: An Introduction to the Bizarro Genre (ISBN 9781933929002)
      Bizarro is literature's equivalent to the cult section at the video store.
    • 2006, Gina Ranalli, Chemical Gardens (ISBN 9780976631064)
      Bizarro isn't really a new genre. Just a new term.
    • 2009 December 11, Alison Flood, "When authors attack", The Guardian
      Not only does it centre on the dire-sounding romance novel, Electra Galaxy's Mr Interstellar Feller (product description: "When a handsome yet stuffy intergalactic cop is forced to enter the Electra Galaxy's Mr Interstellar Feller competition, and is partnered with an Earth cop as his manager and overseer, hilarity and romance ensue"), but it takes the bizarro quotient to new levels.

Portuguese

Adjective

bizarro m (feminine singular bizarra, masculine plural bizarros, feminine plural bizarras, comparable)

  1. bizarre, strange
  2. exotic

Spanish

Etymology

Presumably from the same source as bizarre, which may be Basque (bizardun (bearded), from bizar (beard)) or Italian. See bizarre for more.

Pronunciation

Adjective

bizarro m (feminine singular bizarra, masculine plural bizarros, feminine plural bizarras)

  1. dashing, brave, spirited, gallant
  2. generous, magnanimous, noble
    • January 3rd, 1832, Necrologia Gaceta de Madrid, Imprenta Real, page 98:
      [...]; y conociendo su posición se fortaleció con los auxilios de la religión, ostentando hasta en su último aliento la resignación de un buen cristiano, y espirando como el hombre de bien, y con la serenidad de un bizarro militar.
      [...]; and knowing his position he strengthened himself with the aid of religion, flaunting in his last breath the resignation of a good Christian, and expiring as the good man, and with the serenity of a noble soldier.
  3. (Argentina, Chile) bizarre, strange, weird

Synonyms

Usage notes

  • Bizarro is a false friend, and does not mean bizarre. Spanish equivalents are shown in the "Translations" section of the English entry bizarre.