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Fictional name literally meaning "almost like"
Answer for the clue "Fictional name literally meaning "almost like" ", 9 letters:
quasimodo
Alternative clues for the word quasimodo
Word definitions for quasimodo in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Quasimodo is the title character in Victor Hugo 's novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame . Quasimodo may also refer to: Quasimodo (magazine) , a University of Notre Dame Australia student newspaper Quasimodo (comics) , a Marvel Comics supervillain Quasimodo ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Quasimodo \Quas`i*mo"do\, n. [So called from the first words of the Latin introit, quasi modo geniti infantes as newborn babes, --1 Pet. ii. 2.] (R. C. Ch.) The first Sunday after Easter; Low Sunday.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"Low Sunday," 1706, Quasimodo Sunday , from Latin quasi modo, first words of introit for the first Sunday after Easter: quasi modo geniti infantes "as newborn babes" (1 Pet. ii:2). The hunchback in Victor Hugo's novel was supposed to have been abandoned ...
Usage examples of quasimodo.
Quasimodo sur la borne, la Esmeralda sur le toit, Phoebus sans doute aux pieds de Fleur-de-Lys.
The general opinion was that the day had arrived when, according to agreement, Quasimodo, or the devil, was to carry away Claude Frollo, the sorcerer.
MY SALVAGE-YARD FURNITURE (TOO SCARRED AND TACKY to meet the standards of the thrift shops that sold to Stormy), my paperback books neatly arranged on shelves made of stacked bricks and boards, my framed posters of Quasimodo as played by Charles Laughton and Hamlet as played by Mel Gibson and ET from the movie of the same name (three fictional characters with whom I identify for different reasons), the cardboard Elvis perpetually smiling.
At one time the spectator would be seized with affright, on beholding at the top of one of the towers an odd-looking dwarf, climbing, twining, crawling on all fours, descending externally into the abyss, leaping from one projecting point to another, and fumbling in the body of some sculptured Gorgon: it was Quasimodo unnesting the crows.
Hiram White, an elderly man with a humped back who shambled around his wrenches and engine belts like Quasimodo amid the bells—sat at his desk, his head cocked toward a radio.