cosplay

1 of 2

noun

cos·​play ˈkäz-ˌplā How to pronounce cosplay (audio)
ˈkäs-
plural cosplays
: the activity or practice of dressing up as a character from a work of fiction (such as a comic book, video game, or television show)
In cosplay, a good costume is as much about creativity with materials and construction as it is about the outcome. So while some people spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on custom outfits for cons, many more invest in time, using cheap materials and household items to transform themselves into characters of superhuman, mythical proportions.Jamal Jordan
often used before another noun
cosplay fans
Festivities would not be complete without a cosplay competition.Charlotte Bray

cosplay

2 of 2

verb

cosplayed; cosplaying; cosplays
1
intransitive : to engage in cosplay
cosplaying as anime characters
The positive reaction he received from fellow conventioneers felt so good that he's been cosplaying ever since.Pam Kragen
2
transitive : to dress up as (a fictional character) in cosplay
She said she has cosplayed other women in science fiction or fantasy, but Wonder Woman is the first woman superhero, and one of the earliest representations of a strong, capable woman she saw growing up.Rebecca White
cosplaying noun
Cosplaying is a big, colorful part of Tokyo in Tulsa and it's safe to say that, other than Halloween, Broken Arrow has never been populated by this many costumed characters. Jimmie Tramel
a cosplaying event

Did you know?

If you enjoy cosplaying as your favorite anime character (say, Nezuko Kamada from Demon Slayer or Luffy from One Piece), you’ve got yourself a special, lexicographical twofer of words that were borrowed from English into Japanese and then back into English. In Japanese, anime is short for animēshiyon, which comes from the English word animation, referring to an animated cartoon. Japanese users similarly took the English words costume and play (as in role-play) and combined them into the word kosuchūmupurē, or kosupure for short, which was reborrowed into English as cosplay, first as a noun, and later as a verb. It's not required that one choose an anime character to cosplay, however—any fictional character will do, and probably has done! People are even starting to use cosplay figuratively to mean “to pretend to be,” as in “her chiweenie likes to cosplay as a much bigger dog whenever they visit the dog park.”

Examples of cosplay in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Noun
Hollywood actors, costume designers, makeup people, stunt performers, writers and producers around the area are part of the creative ferment that makes Halloween, horror, cosplay, ghost stories, sci-fi and the supernatural so popular. Michael Goldstein, Forbes, 31 Oct. 2024 Sidestepping that insurrection cosplay, the Anchorman actor’s main lawyer Stanley Woodward unsuccessfully tried to keep his client’s prison time to less than a year. Dominic Patten, Deadline, 28 Oct. 2024
Verb
Megan Thee Stallion often cosplays as her favorite anime and comic-book characters, so crushing her Starfire look was no surprise. Michael Saponara, Billboard, 30 Oct. 2024 Expats is a bit of a mess, a shambolic drag that cosplays Wong Kar-Wai melancholia while performing perfunctory class criticism, but the Prime Video series does have two things going for it. Nicholas Quah, Vulture, 26 Oct. 2024 See all Example Sentences for cosplay 

Word History

Etymology

Noun

cos(tume) entry 1 + play entry 2, after Japanese kosupure, short for kosuchūmupurē, borrowed from English costume + (role) play

Note: The Japanese word was allegedly introduced in print by the Japanese publisher and media producer Noboyuki Takahashi (born 1957) in the June, 1983 issue of the magazine Mai Anime/My Anime (see Brian Ashcraft and Luke Plunkett, Cosplay World [Prestel, 2014], pp. 18-20; the authors quote from an interview with Takahashi and reproduce pages from the magazine).

Verb

derivative of cosplay entry 1

First Known Use

Noun

1993, in the meaning defined above

Verb

1993, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of cosplay was in 1993

Podcast

Dictionary Entries Near cosplay

Cite this Entry

“Cosplay.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cosplay. Accessed 22 Nov. 2024.

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
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