Citations:princessification

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of princessification

Noun: "the process of making or becoming girly or hyperfeminine"[edit]

2011 2012 2013
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2011, The Mumsnet Rules, Bloomsbury (2011), →ISBN, page 224:
    Here is a tale from the 1970s, before the widespread princessification of girls' childhoods: []
  • 2011, Emma Jane, "Princessification of girlhood gives this mum a pink fit", The Australian, 12 March 2011:
    But while I'm not convinced that pinkification and princessification is the same as sexualisation and pornification, I do think the stereotyped rhetoric accompanying the pink-quake is A Real Worry.
  • 2012, Clare Heal, "Milne’s music strikes right note", Daily Express, 24 June 2012:
    There are two reasons my feelings towards Disney are slightly frosty. First, I cannot stand the princessification (no, it’s not a word but it should be) of girls’ childhoods that has happened over the past couple of decades, something for which it is largely responsible.
  • 2012, Esther Cepeda, "Perils of the princesses", Indianapolis Star, 16 November 2012:
    The bordering-on-sick fascination shows itself in nearly every aspect of life from the pink and royal purple princessification of Lego brick sets to the way we exalt or condemn people in the news.
  • 2013, "Glosswitch", "Don't be too quick to knock sugar-pink, prince-free, Disney-style princessification", New Statesman, 29 July 2013:
    Indeed, if anything, the sugary pink “princessification” of girlhood feels more extreme than ever.

Noun: "the act of turning into a princess"[edit]

1844
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1844, Catherine Grace Frances Gore, The Birthright, and Other Tales, Volume II, Henry Colburn (1844), page 297:
    [] and a few more, of the Bloomsbury and Baker Street class, agitate themselves to hysterics in hunting up the crowned heads, incog, and getting up an intimacy with some Russian princess, who turns out, in the sequel, to be an opera-singer from Berlin or Dresden, of temporary princessification.