bathos

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. Overdone or treacly attempts to inspire pathos.
  2. A risible failure on the part of a work of art to properly affect its audience, particularly owing to
  3. A risible failure on the part of a work of art to properly affect its audience, particularly owing to:
  4. An anticlimax: an abrupt transition in style or subject from high to low.
  5. A banality: an unaffectingly clichéd or trite treatment of a topic.
  6. Immaturity: a lack of serious treatment of a topic.
  7. A hyperbole: excessiveness.
  8. The ironic use of such failure for satiric or humorous effect.
  9. A nadir, a low point particularly in one's career.

Pronunciation

/ˈbeɪθɒs/

Word forms

bathos bathoses

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek βάθος (báthos, “depth”). Employed ironically following Alexander Pope's Peri Bathous, lampooning various errors in contemporary writers.

Antonyms

Related words

Derived words

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.