Legoland
English
Etymology
Name of a chain of theme parks based on the Lego building bricks; + -land.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
Legoland (plural Legolands)
- (slang) A place characterised by square edges and extreme regularity.
- 1997, Mark McCrum, No worries: a journey through Australia:
- ...three hundred yards back from that, behind a legoland of hotels and apartment blocks...
- 2004, Tim Jepson, The rough guide to Canada:
- Its pristine stone houses, most of which date from around 1685, are undeniably photogenic, with their steep metal roofs, numerous chimneys and pastel-coloured shutters, but it's a Legoland townscape, devoid of the scars of history.
- 2004, Neil Leach; Laurent Gutierrez; Valérie Portefaix, China:
- Gradually these Legolands appear bigger and bigger, closer and closer, as the aircraft descends.
- 2004, Yorke M Rowan; Uzi Baram, Marketing heritage: archaeology and the consumption of the past:
- Unlike most cities and towns in the East, one Bavarian preservationist claimed, modernized West German cities had mutated into "schematized Legolands"...
-
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.