soap opera
English
Etymology
From the soap and detergent commercials originally broadcast during the shows, which were aimed at the audience of women who were doing their cleaning; opera from the melodramatic character of the shows, as the earlier horse opera.
Noun
soap opera (countable and uncountable, plural soap operas)
- (countable) A radio or television serial, typically broadcast in the afternoon or evening, about the lives of melodramatic characters, which are often filled with strong emotions, highly dramatic situations and suspense.
- Synonyms: (colloquial) soap, daytime serial, (colloquial, popular among older people) story, (India) serial, (Philippines) teleserye, (particularly Latin America) telenovela, (Indonesia) sinetron
- Coordinate term: telenovela
- 2002, Robert C. Allen, To Be Continued...: Soap Operas Around the World, Routledge, →ISBN, page 81:
- This chapter considers the growing interest in the popular Welsh-language soap opera, Pobol Y Cwm (People of the Valley), and the extent to which discourses of Welshness and definitions of cultural and national identity contribute to the appeal and longevity of the soap.
- 2014, Frank J. Lechner, John Boli, The Globalization Reader, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 393:
- It also followed the very successful long-running soap opera, Neighbours.
- (uncountable) Such serials in general.
Descendants
- → German: Seifenoper (calque)
Translations
television serial
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See also
- sudsy (adjective)
Further reading
- soap opera on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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