miles gloriosus
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: - A braggart soldier (a stock figure in comedy): A character type, originating in ancient Roman and Greek comedy, who is a soldier that boasts loudly and excessively about his (often fictitious) military exploits and valor while being fundamentally cowardly.
Usage
- The term is used as a specific literary and theatrical label for a classic character archetype.
- It is often applied more broadly to describe any person who behaves in a similarly boastful and cowardly manner.
Examples
- The play's central character is a classic , whose tall tales of heroism are constantly undercut by his fear of actual conflict.
- In his behavior at the bar, boasting about his business conquests, he was acting like a modern .
- The comedy relied on the familiar trope of the being exposed as a fraud.
Advanced Usage
- The character is a stock figure, meaning a stereotypical character that appears repeatedly in a particular genre of literature or drama.
- The archetype serves to satirize hypocrisy, vanity, and the gap between appearance and reality.
Variants and Related Words
- Braggart (n): A person who boasts about achievements or possessions. (This is the general term, while is the specific theatrical archetype.)
- Braggadocio (n): Boastful or arrogant behavior.
Synonyms
- Braggart
- Boaster
- Swaggerer
- Blowhard
Related Idioms and Phrases
- "All talk and no action": This idiom describes the essential nature of the character.
- "His bark is worse than his bite": Often used to describe someone who makes fierce threats but is not actually dangerous, similar to the cowardice underlying the bravado.
Noun
- a braggart soldier (a stock figure in comedy)