tropey

English

Etymology

trope + -y

Adjective

tropey (comparative more tropey, superlative most tropey)

  1. Related to, featuring, or characteristic of a trope or tropes.
    • 2005, David Rakoff, Don't Get Too Comfortable, Anchor Canada (2006), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
      Most demurs, saying that were he to tell, his version would unhealthily influence others' vision and we'd all be stuck using the same derivative tropes (more derivative and tropey than "push yourself out of your comfort zone," I'm guessing).
    • 2015, Jessica McDonald, "Not Your Mystical Indian", in Invisible 2: Personal Essays on Representation in SF/F (ed. Jim C. Hines), unnumbered page:
      Relatable Native characters in sci-fi and fantasy are few in[sic] far between. Mostly, I see variations on tropey themes.
    • 2015, René Le Bas, "The Adventures of Suzy Boon", WebShowCentral, Number 10, Spring 2015, page 7:
      Often, a character talking to themselves can come across as tropey or hacky.
    • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:tropey.

Anagrams

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