Bluto
English
    

Bluto (at left) in I'm in the Army Now (1936)
Etymology
    
Fictional character name for the antagonist of Popeye coined in 1932 by cartoonist Elzie Crisler Segar.
Pronunciation
    
- Rhymes: -uːtəʊ
Proper noun
    
Bluto
- A man who is large and muscular in top-heavy proportions, often combined with a comically brutish and aggressive personality.
- 1986, Lee K. Abbott, Strangers in paradise, page 38:- He was built like Bluto. "Who the hell are you?" he said.
 
- 2008, Bret Lott, Ancient Highway: A Novel, page 152:- For whatever reason, it'd taken her a little while to get out of the cab when they first got here, and when Chuck introduced me — she stood a full foot shorter than him, a tiny woman next to this Bluto of a man, a knitted green afghan over her shoulders, a white blouse and blue jeans.
 
- 2010, Susan Wilson, One Good Dog, page 21:- His pit bull parts thinned out his back end but gave him a Bluto disproportion in his front end.
 
- 2011, Shaun Attwood, chapter 25, in Hard Time: Life with Sheriff Joe Arpaio in America's Toughest Jail:- It wasn't the black loudmouth I'd expected but a Bluto of a man almost filling the entire doorway.
 
- 2015, Maryann Bouco, chapter 4, in The Last Stand:- The customers sometimes called him Bluto. He earned the nickname by his tremendous build and great strength.
 
 
Quotations
    
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Bluto.
Translations
    
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