Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective In the style of Enid Blyton (1897-1968), British children's writer, whose works are characterised by
harmless mysteries investigated bywholesome children .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Blytonesque.
Examples
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Both author and protagonist have a more moral defence of freedom than their inspirations, a sense of class justice, a Robin Hood reparation, a visceral hatred of the "Blytonesque" bourgeois.
SpikeMagazine.com 2009
-
Laura Solon, still only the second woman to win the award formerly known as the Perrier (now sponsored by Foster's), brings us The Owl of Steven, in which a motley collection of her brilliantly observed characters gather on a remote island, all looking for its fabled owl in a Blytonesque adventure.
-
It's the very image of the kind of wholesome, Enid Blytonesque activity that parents hope their children will be engaged in during the summer holidays but, let's be honest, probably aren't.
-
Twoi is what you get when you cross twee; the horribly annoying, faux-posh, passive-aggressive distillation of Enid Blytonesque 1950s English middle classes.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.