English
Proper noun
Hollywood
- An area of Los Angeles, known as the center of the American motion picture industry.
- (by extension) The American motion picture industry, regardless of location.
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2013 June 29, “Travels and travails”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8842, page 55:- Even without hovering drones, a lurking assassin, a thumping score and a denouement, the real-life story of Edward Snowden, a rogue spy on the run, could be straight out of the cinema. But, as with Hollywood, the subplots and exotic locations may distract from the real message: America’s discomfort and its foes’ glee.
Derived terms
Translations
area of Los Angeles
- Arabic: هُولِيوُود m (holiwūd), هُولِيوُود m (holiwud)
- Armenian: Հոլիվուդ (Holivud)
- Belarusian: Галівуд m (Halivúd), Халівуд m (Xalivud)
- Bengali: হলিউড (hôli'uḑ)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 荷里活 (ho6 lei5 wut6)
- Mandarin: 好萊塢 (zh), 好莱坞 (zh) (Hǎoláiwù)
- Czech: Hollywood (cs) m
- Dutch: Hollywood (nl)
- Esperanto: Holivudo
- Finnish: Hollywood
- French: Hollywood (fr) m
- Georgian: ჰოლივუდი (holivudi)
- German: Hollywood (de) n
- Greek: Χόλυγουντ n (Chólygount)
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- Hebrew: הוליווד m (holivud)
- Hindi: हॉलीवुड (hŏlīvuḍ)
- Hungarian: Hollywood (hu)
- Japanese: ハリウッド (Hariuddo)
- Korean: 할리우드 (Halliudeu)
- Marathi: हॉलीवुड (hŏlīvuḍa)
- Nepali: हलिवुड (halivuḍ)
- Persian: هالیوود (fa) (Hâlivud)
- Polish: Hollywood (pl) n
- Portuguese: Hollywood m
- Russian: Голливу́д (ru) m (Gollivúd)
- Serbo-Croatian: Hollywood (sh) (Croatian), Холивуд (Serbian), Holivud (Serbian)
- Spanish: Hollywood m
- Thai: ฮอลลีวูด (honleewôot)
- Ukrainian: Голлівуд m (Hollivúd)
- Yiddish: האָליוווּד m (holivud)
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the American motion picture industry
- Arabic: هُولِيوُود m (holiwūd), هُولِيوُود m (holiwud)
- Armenian: Հոլիվուդ (Holivud)
- Belarusian: Галівуд m (Halivúd)
- Bengali: হলিউড (hôli'uḑ)
- Bulgarian: Холивуд m (Holivud)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 好萊塢 (zh), 好莱坞 (zh) (Hǎoláiwù)
- Dutch: Hollywood (nl)
- Finnish: Hollywood
- French: Hollywood (fr) m
- Georgian: ჰოლივუდი (holivudi)
- German: Hollywood (de) n
- Greek: Χόλυγουντ n (Chólygount)
- Hebrew: הוליווד m (holivud)
- Hindi: हॉलीवुड (hŏlīvuḍ)
- Hungarian: Hollywood (hu)
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- Japanese: ハリウッド (Hariuddo)
- Korean: 할리우드 (Halliudeu)
- Marathi: हॉलीवुड (hŏlīvuḍa)
- Nepali: हलिवुड (halivuḍ)
- Persian: هالیوود (fa) (Hâlivud)
- Portuguese: Hollywood f
- Russian: Голливу́д (ru) m (Gollivúd)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Холивуд m
- Roman: Hollywood (sh) m, Holivud m
- Spanish: Hollywood m
- Thai: ฮอลลีวูด (honleewôot)
- Ukrainian: Голлівуд m (Hollivúd)
- Urdu: ہالی ووڈ m (hālī vuḍ), ہالیووڈ m (hālīvuḍ), ہالی وڈ m (hālī vuḍ), ہالیوڈ m (hālīvuḍ)
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Adjective
Hollywood (comparative more Hollywood, superlative most Hollywood)
- Resembling or relating to Hollywood.
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2013, Marc Raymond, Hollywood's New Yorker: The Making of Martin Scorsese, page 68:- The film is at once too Hollywood and too realistic. It is tied to genre conventions while stylistically following the new code of realism, especially with regard to mise-en-scène and performance.
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2002, Jon E. Lewis, Hollywood v. Hard Core: How the Struggle Over Censorship Created the Modern Film Industry, pages 168-169:- As many critics pointed out, the timely (but mostly tame and light) comedy was not too controversial, but too popular, too American, and too Hollywood to headline a festival that was scheduled to screen the likes of Robert Bresson's Un Feme Douce, Jean-Luc Godard's Le Gai Savior, Eric Rohmer's My Night at Maud's, Agnes Varda's Lion's Love, Paola Pier Pasolini's Pigpen, and Bo Widenberg's Adelen '31.
Noun
Hollywood (plural Hollywoods)
- A waxing practice that removes all of the pubic hair, unlike a Brazilian which leaves a small strip behind.
- 2009, Shane Watson, How to Meet a Man After Forty and Other Midlife Dilemmas
- If you ask the woman who does your waxing she will tell you that everyone is asking for Brazilians or Hollywoods, including Gwyneth Paltrow […]
Spanish
Proper noun
Hollywood m
- Hollywood (area of Los Angeles)
- Hollywood (the American motion picture industry)