pasquinade

pasquinade
pasquinader, n.pasquinian /pas kwin"ee euhn/, adj.
/pas'kweuh nayd"/, n., v., pasquinaded, pasquinading.
n.
1. a satire or lampoon, esp. one posted in a public place.
v.t.
2. to assail in a pasquinade or pasquinades.
[1585-95; Pasquin ( < It Pasquino, name given an antique Roman statue unearthed in 1501 that was annually decorated and posted with verses) + -ADE1; r. pasquinata < It]

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▪ literary genre
      brief and generally anonymous satirical comment in prose or verse that ridicules a contemporary leader or national event. Pasquinade is derived from “Pasquino,” the popular name for the remains of an ancient Roman statue unearthed in Rome in 1501. “Pasquino,” supposedly named after a local shopkeeper near whose house or shop the statue was discovered, was the focus for bitingly critical political squibs attached to its torso by anonymous satirists. These pasquinades and their imitations, some ascribed to important 16th-century writers such as Aretino, were collected and published. After the 16th century the vogue of posting pasquinades died out, and the term acquired its more general meaning.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Pasquinade — refers to an anonymous lampoon, whether in verse [In verse, the pasquinade finds a classical source in the epigrams of Martial: John W. Spaeth, Jr., Martial and the Pasquinade Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association… …   Wikipedia

  • pasquinade — [ paskinad ] n. f. • 1566; it. pasquinata → pasquin ♦ Vieilli et littér. Raillerie bouffonne. ⇒PASQUINADE, subst. fém. Vieilli A. HIST. LITTÉR. [Corresp. à pasquin A] 1. Placard satirique que les Romains accrochaient sur le socle de la statue de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Pasquinade — Pas quin*ade , n. [F. pasquinade, It. pasquinata.] A lampoon or satirical writing. Macaulay. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • pasquinade — [pas′kwilpas΄kwi nād′] n. [Fr < It pasquinata, after Pasquino, classical statue in Rome to which it was the custom in the 16th c. to attach satirical verses] a satirical piece of writing that holds its object up to ridicule, formerly one… …   English World dictionary

  • Pasquinade — Pas quin*ade , v. t. To lampoon, to satirize. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Pasquinade — (v. fr., spr. Paskinahd), ein mehr witziger als boshafter, pasquillähnlicher Scherz …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Pasquinade — (franz., spr. paski ), s. Pasquill …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • pasquinade — index parody, ridicule Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • pasquinade — (n.) a lampoon, 1650s, from M.Fr., from It. pasquinata (c.1500), from Pasquino, name given to a mutilated ancient statue (now known to represent Menelaus dragging the dead Patroclus) set up by Cardinal Caraffa in his palace in Rome in 1501; the… …   Etymology dictionary

  • pasquinade — lampoon, squib, skit, *libel …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • pasquinade — Pasquinade. s. f. Raillerie satyrique. Faire des pasquinades. un faiseur de pasquinades …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

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