recurring cause - определение. Что такое recurring cause
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Что (кто) такое recurring cause - определение

CHARACTER, USUALLY IN A PRIME TIME TV SERIES, WHO OFTEN AND FREQUENTLY APPEARS FROM TIME TO TIME DURING THE SERIES' RUN
Recurring role; Recurring characters
Найдено результатов: 541
cause celebre         
ISSUE OR INCIDENT WHICH INCITES WIDESPREAD CONTROVERSY AND PUBLIC DEBATE
Cause celebre; Famous cases; Causes celebres; Cause Celebre; Causes célèbres; Cause celèbre; Cause Célèbre; Cause célébre
also cause celebre (causes celebres)
A cause celebre is an issue, person, or criminal trial that has attracted a lot of public attention and discussion. (FORMAL)
The Kravchenko trial became a cause celebre in Paris and internationally.
N-COUNT
Cause of death         
SPECIFIC DISEASE OR INJURY RESULTING IN A HUMAN'S DEATH, WHICH MAY BE RECORDED ON A DEATH CERTIFICATE
Cause-of-death; Cause of Death; Cause fo death
In law, medicine, and statistics, cause of death is an official determination of conditions resulting in a human's death, which may be recorded on a death certificate. A cause of death is determined by a medical examiner.
cause celebre         
ISSUE OR INCIDENT WHICH INCITES WIDESPREAD CONTROVERSY AND PUBLIC DEBATE
Cause celebre; Famous cases; Causes celebres; Cause Celebre; Causes célèbres; Cause celèbre; Cause Célèbre; Cause célébre
Cause marketing         
MARKETING DONE BY A FOR-PROFIT BUSINESS THAT SEEKS TO INCREASE PROFITS AND BETTER SOCIETY IN ACCORDANCE WITH CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Cause related marketing; Cause-related Marketing; Cause-Related Marketing; Cause Related Marketing; Cause-related marketing
Cause marketing is marketing done by a for-profit business that seeks to both increase profits and to better society in accordance with corporate social responsibility, such as by including activist messages in advertising.
cause celebre         
ISSUE OR INCIDENT WHICH INCITES WIDESPREAD CONTROVERSY AND PUBLIC DEBATE
Cause celebre; Famous cases; Causes celebres; Cause Celebre; Causes célèbres; Cause celèbre; Cause Célèbre; Cause célébre
[?k?:z s?'l?br(?)]
¦ noun (plural causes celebres pronunciation same) a controversial issue that attracts a great deal of public attention.
Origin
C18: Fr., lit. 'famous case'.
The Common Cause         
1919 FILM BY J. STUART BLACKTON
The Common Cause (film)
The Common Cause is a lostThe Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Common Cause 1919 American silent comedy film directed and produced by J. Stuart Blackton and distributed by Vitagraph Company of America.
In a Good Cause         
LONG STORY BY ISAAC ASIMOV
In a Good Cause-; In a Good Cause--
"In a Good Cause—" is a science fiction short story by American writer Isaac Asimov. The story first appeared in a 1951 edition of the anthology New Tales of Space and Time and was reprinted in the collection Nightfall and Other Stories (1969).
lost cause         
  • Frontispiece]] to the first edition of<br/>Dixon's ''The Clansman'',<br/> by [[Arthur I. Keller]].}}
  • redemption]]", and relinquished in 2020 during the [[George Floyd protests]].
  • Flag of Georgia]] (1956–2001)
  • The Lost Cause ideology includes fallacies about the relationships between slaves and their masters.
  • The [[United Daughters of the Confederacy]] helped promulgate the Lost Cause's ideology through the construction of numerous memorials, such as this one in Tennessee.
AMERICAN HISTORICAL NEGATIONIST IDEOLOGY THAT HOLDS THAT THE CAUSE OF THE CONFEDERACY DURING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR WAS A JUST AND HEROIC ONE
Lost Cause; Southern nostalgia; The Lost Cause; Confederate cause; The Rebel Cause; Rebel Cause; Rebel cause; Lost cause of the Confederacy; Lost Cause myth; The Lost Cause of the Confederacy; Lost Cause narrative; Northern Aggression; Confederate apologism; Confederate apologist; Lost cause mythology
(lost causes)
If you refer to something or someone as a lost cause, you mean that people's attempts to change or influence them have no chance of succeeding.
They do not want to expend energy in what, to them, is a lost cause.
N-COUNT
lost cause         
  • Frontispiece]] to the first edition of<br/>Dixon's ''The Clansman'',<br/> by [[Arthur I. Keller]].}}
  • redemption]]", and relinquished in 2020 during the [[George Floyd protests]].
  • Flag of Georgia]] (1956–2001)
  • The Lost Cause ideology includes fallacies about the relationships between slaves and their masters.
  • The [[United Daughters of the Confederacy]] helped promulgate the Lost Cause's ideology through the construction of numerous memorials, such as this one in Tennessee.
AMERICAN HISTORICAL NEGATIONIST IDEOLOGY THAT HOLDS THAT THE CAUSE OF THE CONFEDERACY DURING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR WAS A JUST AND HEROIC ONE
Lost Cause; Southern nostalgia; The Lost Cause; Confederate cause; The Rebel Cause; Rebel Cause; Rebel cause; Lost cause of the Confederacy; Lost Cause myth; The Lost Cause of the Confederacy; Lost Cause narrative; Northern Aggression; Confederate apologism; Confederate apologist; Lost cause mythology
¦ noun a person or thing that can no longer hope to succeed or be changed for the better.
Cause Célèbre (play)         
  • First edition (publ. [[Hamish Hamilton]], 1978)
RADIO PLAY BY TERENCE RATTIGAN
Cause Célèbre (TV serial); Cause Celebre (play); A Woman of Principle
Cause Célèbre or A Woman of Principle is a 1975 radio play, and the final play by the English author Terence Rattigan. It was inspired by the trial of Alma Rattenbury and her teenage lover in 1935 for the murder of her third husband Francis Rattenbury and first broadcast by the BBC on 27 October 1975.

Википедия

Recurring character

A recurring character is a fictional character, usually in a prime time TV series, who frequently appears from time to time during the series' run. Recurring characters often play major roles in more than one episode, sometimes being the main focus. They may be contrasted with "regular" characters, who typically appear in every or almost every episode of a series. Recurring characters appear less frequently than regulars, but more frequently than guest star characters, who may appear in only one or two episodes without being expected to return.

Recurring characters sometimes start out as guest stars in one episode, who then reappear in future episodes because creators or audiences found the actors or storylines compelling enough to revisit. Sometimes a recurring character eventually becomes part of the main cast of characters; such a character is sometimes called a breakout character. Some notable examples of main characters who were originally recurring characters are: Eli Gold on The Good Wife; Leo Chingkwake on That '70s Show; Angel and Oz on Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Marc St. James on Ugly Betty; Vanessa Abrams on Gossip Girl; Zack Allan on Babylon 5; Steve Urkel on Family Matters; Donna Moss on The West Wing; Steve Harrington on Stranger Things; and Felicity Smoak on Arrow.

In other cases, recurring characters have been given spin-off series of their own, such as Dr. Frasier Crane who originally was a recurring character on Cheers. Kelsey Grammer, along with fellow recurring actor John Ratzenberger were hired for seven episodes, to play Frasier Crane and Cliff Clavin respectively. Cliff was scheduled to recur during the 1982–1983 season, Frasier to recur during 1984–1985 season. Both actors were subsequently upgraded to the main cast, and Crane continued in his own series following the end of Cheers.

On sketch comedy programs, recurring characters are generally a staple. For example, in the sketch comedy series Your Show of Shows, Sid Caesar used the concept frequently:

As we were building and evolving our sketch comedy, we would look for new types of sketches that had legs (not caterpillar legs). We liked the idea of recurring characters and themes. It gave us something we could start with and something the audience could connect with.

Usually they appear in their own sketch and the sketch itself can become a regular part of the show. Some notable examples include the Church Lady and Hans and Franz from Saturday Night Live, the Gumbys from Monty Python's Flying Circus, and Bob and Doug McKenzie from SCTV. However, the characters are not always limited to their own sketches. Sometimes, characters from a recurring sketch go on to appear in other sketches, or develop into their own TV shows. For example, when The Carol Burnett Show was canceled the central character of a popular recurring sketch called The Family, Thelma "Mama" Harper, went on to have her own show Mama's Family. Also, recurring characters in sketch comedy shows can go on to have their own movies. This is especially true with Saturday Night Live which has had many recurring characters turn into movies such as Stuart Smalley, Wayne and Garth of Wayne's World, The Blues Brothers, and The Ladies Man. Recurring characters may even revisit shows long after the actor who played them has left the cast, for example, the character Mary Katherine Gallagher was portrayed by Molly Shannon when she hosted Saturday Night Live in 2007, six years after she left the cast. Sometimes a recurring character from one show appears on another show, such as when Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis hosted Saturday Night Live in 1983 and portrayed Bob and Doug MacKenzie, or when Emily Litella (portrayed by Gilda Radner) from Saturday Night Live appeared on The Muppet Show in 1978. Sacha Baron Cohen's character Ali G is another example, originating on the Channel Four series The Eleven O'Clock Show. The character was such a huge success that Cohen got his own show as the original show was cancelled.

Recurring characters are not limited to television. In the early 20th century, the Saturday Evening Post frequently had recurring characters in their cover art, such as Baby New Year. The Shmoo was a recurring character in the comic strip Li'l Abner, which eventually went on to appear in the TV cartoon series Fred and Barney Meet the Shmoo and The New Shmoo. The Sherlock Holmes series of novels by Arthur Conan Doyle featured well-known recurring characters such as Inspector Lestrade and Mrs. Hudson.

In US daytime soap operas, recurring characters are ones played by actors who do not have a contract. They are not obligated to play the role and have no guarantee of work. Actors on recurring status used to be referred to as day players.