tear-cat

English

Noun

tear-cat (plural tear-cats)

  1. (obsolete, acting) An overactor.
    • 1606, Day, John, The Isle of Gulls, in White, Thomas, editor, The Old English Drama, volume 4, published 1830, Induction, page 15:
      Fie upon't, mere fustian; I had rather hear two good bawdy jests then a whole play of such tear-cat thunder-claps.
    • 1611, Middleton, Thomas; Dekker, Thomas, The Roaring Girl, Act 5, Scene 1:
      I am cal'd by those that have seen my valour, Tear-Cat.

Synonyms

References

  • Mackay, Charles (1884) New Light on Some Obscure Words and Phrases in the Works of Shakespeare and his Contemporaries, Tear Cat, page 63: “This odd epithet was applied in the seventeenth century to violent and ranting actors who overdid their parts.”

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