copycat
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L310534 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /kɑpiˈkæt/
adj
Etymology: Originally American English, from copy + cat (“a former derogatory term for a person”).
- Imitative; unoriginal.
“copycat crime”
““Because of my size, I was a natural leader in junior high school. Gangs are the most copycat of subcultures. It used to be zoot suits; now it's tattoos. When I was thirteen, I got a tattoo.””
noun
Etymology: Originally American English, from copy + cat (“a former derogatory term for a person”).
- One who imitates or plagiarizes the work of others.
“And in it all they are merely copy-cats—servile followers of the aristocratic creed, but without the genuine prestige of the old-time nobilities.”
“I wanted to make them brilliant. I wanted to make them interesting. And of course I could not do it by myself. I am nothing but a copycat. I just quoted a lot of things I had heard you say; and I did worse than that, Peter.”
- A criminal who imitates the crimes of another; specifically, a criminal who commits the same crime, especially a highly-publicized one, that has recently been committed by someone else.
“a copycat strangler”
verb
Etymology: Originally American English, from copy + cat (“a former derogatory term for a person”).
- To act as a copycat; to copy in a shameless or derivative way.
“Because beasts don't talk with words, they talk with sounds, and I copycatted my language from beasts and birds[…]”
“In a genre that is rife with copycatting, Ms. Cain deserves some credit for having gotten a potentially interesting new series off the ground.”