paparazzi

英 [,pɑːpə'rɑːtsiː] 美
  • n. 狗仔队(专门追逐名人偷拍照片的摄影者或记者,paparazzo的复数)
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这个单词来源于意大利电影『la dolce vita』中一个著名的角色:Paparazzo,他以偷拍名流私生活为生,后来人们借用他名字的复数形式paparazzi表达这一类人,也就是我们熟知的狗仔队。
paparazzi
paparazzi: [20] In Federico Fellini’s film La Dolce Vita (1959), a press photographer who pesters celebrities is called Paparazzo (the name was supplied by the writer of the film’s scenario, Ennio Flaiano, who in turn got it from Sulle Rive dello Ionio (1957), Margherita Guidacci’s translation of George Gissing’s travel book By the Ionian Sea (1901), in which a restaurantowner is called Coriolano Paparazzo). By the late 1960s the name, usually in the Italian plural form paparazzi, had entered English as a generic term for such intrusive snappers.
paparazzi (n.)
1961, from Italian Paparazzo (plural paparazzi) surname of the freelance photographer in Federico Fellini's 1959 film "La Dolce Vita." The surname itself is of no special significance; it is said to be a common one in Calabria, and Fellini is said to have borrowed it from a travel book, "By the Ionian Sea," in which occurs the name of hotel owner Coriolano Paparazzo.
1. The paparazzi pursue Armani wherever he travels.
阿玛尼走到哪儿,狗仔队就跟到哪儿。

来自柯林斯例句

2. It seemed difficult for the celebrity couple to get rid of the ubiquitous paparazzi.
这对名人夫妻想要摆脱无所不在的狗仔队似乎很困难。

来自辞典例句

3. Paparazzi were out in force at the Oscar Awards.
狗仔队聚集在奥斯卡颁奖典礼场外.

来自互联网

4. Rarely did the paparazzi think of her reaction to their pursuit.
这些狗仔队鲜少考虑到她对他们的紧追不舍作何反应.

来自互联网

5. Paparazzi stalk him at home and trail him in cars.
狗仔队在他家周围潜伏,开车尾随他.

来自互联网