Paparazzi
WiktionaryText
Etymology
From paparazzi, plural of paparazzo.
Noun
paparazzi plural and, nonstandardly, singular
- ; freelance photographers who sell photographs of celebrities to the media, especially ones who pursue celebrities and attempt to obtain candid photographs.
- 1985, Francis King, One Is a Wanderer: Selected Stories, Hutchinson, ISBN 0091620805, page 312,
- A number of paparazzi had gate-crashed, as had a famous tennis-player and a couple of pop-singers.
- 2004, Noel Botham, The Murder of Princess Diana, Pinnacle Books, ISBN 0-7860-0700-1, page 168,
- A number of paparazzi were there to take pictures, clearly having received a further tip-off about the party’s movements.
- 2007, Stanley Hart, "Oh, Brother", in Two Novellas, AuthorHouse, ISBN 1425987087, page 99,
- “Do you know how many paparazzi stalk those midtown hotels? […]”
- 1985, Francis King, One Is a Wanderer: Selected Stories, Hutchinson, ISBN 0091620805, page 312,
- Used as a plurale tantum.
- 1978, Stephen Birmingham, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, Grossett & Dunlap, ISBN 0448143062, page 184,
- The publicity that would ensue from a court battle with someone of Galella’s ilk would only be bad and would convey to Galella a degree of status and importance that this member of the paparazzi didn’t deserve.
- 2005 April, Kathleen O'Reilly, The Diva’s Guide to Selling Your Soul, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1416516565, page 36,
- He manages to snag you just when a member of the paparazzi is skulking by, […]
- 2007, Chris Rojek, Cultural Studies, Polity, ISBN 0745636837, page 55,
- The member of the paparazzi is a Weegee-like figure played by Joe Pesci in the film The Public Eye (1992).
- 1978, Stephen Birmingham, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, Grossett & Dunlap, ISBN 0448143062, page 184,
- A paparazzo.
- 1997, Eeva Joniken and Soile Veijola, "The Disoriented Tourist: The Figuration of the Tourist in Contemporary Cultural Critique", in Chris Rojek and John Urry (eds.), Touring Cultures: Transformations of Travel and Theory, Routledge, 0-415-11125-0, page 46,
- The job of a paparazzi is, roughly, to ‘reveal the truth’ about the rich and the famous.
- 2000, David Naccache and Michael Tunstall, "How to Explain Side-Channel Leakage to Your Kids", in Çetin K. Koç and Christof Paar (eds.), Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems — CHES 2000 (proceedings), Springer, ISBN 3-540-41455-X, page 229,
- A paparazzi is investigating the lives of a Royal couple.
- 2005, Jude Idada, "Ouch!", in A Box of Chocolates, Trafford Publishing, ISBN 1412020268, page 221,
- What if someone I know sees me? Or what if a paparazzi is lurking somewhere?
- 1997, Eeva Joniken and Soile Veijola, "The Disoriented Tourist: The Figuration of the Tourist in Contemporary Cultural Critique", in Chris Rojek and John Urry (eds.), Touring Cultures: Transformations of Travel and Theory, Routledge, 0-415-11125-0, page 46,
- Paparazzi taken as a group.
- 1989, Carol Muske-Dukes, Dear Digby, Viking, ISBN 0670825069, page 148,
- “Tell Page that PAPARAZZI is here, in my apartment. And then tell her that their offices are right across from us …”
- 2001, Geert Lovink, "The Rise and Fall of Dotcom Mania", in Dark Fiber: Tracking Critical Internet Culture, MIT Press (2002), ISBN 0262621800, page 354,
- Rather, the business paparazzi is armoring itself for a backlash campaign against the entrepreneurial big mouths.
- 2006, Kisha Green, And Even If I Did, iUniverse, ISBN 0595390137, page vi,
- Nelishia—You are a special lady with an enormous heart with skills that are off the chains!!! You go girl!!! A definite multi-tasking Diva!! Get your Chanel shades paparazzi is lurking…lol
- 1989, Carol Muske-Dukes, Dear Digby, Viking, ISBN 0670825069, page 148,
Usage notes
- This word is plural in Italian, with singular paparazzo, and this usage is reflected in standard English. The uses of paparazzi as a singular count noun and as a non-count noun are nonstandard.