cookie-cutter
See also: cookiecutter and cookie cutter
English
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Cookie cutters.
Noun
cookie-cutter (plural cookie-cutters)
- (chiefly attributive) Alternative form of cookie cutter
- 1916, ad in The Ladies' Home Journal, volume 33, page 87:
- Let Us Send You a Trial Package
- Ten cents (stamps or coin) will bring you a One-Cake package, enough for a nice “company cake," and we will include a 10c Dromedary Cookie-Cutter and a Cook Book of Choice Cocoanut[sic] Recipes.
- The Hills Brothers Co. Dept. B, 375 Washington Street New York
- 1986, Deniece Schofield, Escape from the Kitchen, →ISBN:
- Cookie cutters and cake-decorating tools are boxed separately in plastic containers (with lids) so I can stack them up. If you have a large cookie-cutter collection, separate them by holiday or season and package in separate smaller boxes and don't forget to label them accordingly.
- 2002, Mary Engelbreit, Christmas with Mary Engelbreit: Here Comes Santa Claus, →ISBN, page 96:
- For platters of good-looking holiday tea sandwiches, look in your cookie-cutter drawer.
- 2013, Rom Harre, Great Scientific Experiments: Twenty Experiments that Changed our View of the World, Courier Corporation, →ISBN:
- In the passive condition the hand was held palm upwards and the cookie-cutters were pressed on to the sensitive skin of the palm. In the active condition it was the finger tips which were mainly in contact with the cookie-cutter.
- 1916, ad in The Ladies' Home Journal, volume 33, page 87:
Adjective
cookie-cutter (comparative more cookie-cutter, superlative most cookie-cutter)
- (figuratively, often derogatory) Having a similar appearance or seeming identical; created by some standard or common means, often with the implication that the result is common, boring, or not applicable to all needs.
- The subdivision was nothing but row after row of cookie-cutter houses.
- I don't think a cookie-cutter solution will work in all cases.
- 1969, Bureau Publication:
- Whether we call it a culture or a subculture, it is always important to avoid the cookie-cutter view of culture, with regard to the individual and to the culture or subculture involved. With regard to the individual, the cookie-cutter view assumes that all individuals in a culture turn out exactly alike, as if they were so many cookies.
- 2006, Paul Wesson, Paul Halpern, Brave New Universe: Illuminating the Darkest Secrets of the Cosmos, page 195:
- Yet nature's artisan seems to have crafted untold quantities of protons (and other elementary particles) with identical rest masses. They are infinitely more “cookie cutter” than anything in a cookie manufacturer's wildest dreams.
Usage notes
First used only in attributive position and without degrees of comparison (from the 1920s); then used freely in predicate position (from the 1990s). Some speakers avoid using it in the predicate position.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
looking or seeming identical
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See also
Further reading
- “cookie-cutter”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
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