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slow burn. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
slow burn, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
slow burn in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
Noun
slow burn (plural slow burns)
- (idiomatic) Something that emerges or unfolds slowly or gradually.
- Synonym: slow burner
2012 May 5, Jim Keeble, “I was a slow-burn dad”, in The Guardian:My own very personal journey into the deepest love of all – that of a parent for a child – was a slow burn. But it left me deeply connected to Milo in a way that I never imagined.
2015 April 9, Karl Mathiesen, “Permafrost 'carbon bomb' may be more of a slow burn, say scientists”, in The Guardian:The ‘carbon bomb’ stored in the thawing Arctic permafrost may be released in a slow leak as global warming takes hold, rather than an eruption, according to new research. [see title]
2023 August 22, Peter Lewis, “AI is not a one-time bomb, but a slow burn of devastation that is consuming jobs and culture”, in The Guardian:Thinking of AI like a bomb makes it seem like something that is deployed in a singular event, albeit one with devastating consequences rather than the slow burn that is consuming jobs and culture.
- A gradually increasing expression of emotion, espeically anger or frustration.
- Antonym: outburst
1957 July 1, “Scoreboard”, in Time, archived from the original on 19 October 2011:In the ninth inning of a game with the Pittsburgh Pirates, Johnny Temple, Cincinnati Redleg second baseman, let a hot grounder sizzle through his legs, looked up to see the Scoreboard flash "error" and began a slow burn.
1976, Alistair MacLean, The Golden Gate, page 125:Revson breathed deeply. “I shall try to conceal my slow burn, what the Victorians would call my mounting exasperation. I thought we had parted friends.”
2008 July 25, Ty Burr, “‘Step Brothers’ is crude, rude—and funny”, in The Boston Globe (film review):The comedy comes from the patient slow burn of the parents as they try to ignore the explosive belligerence of the boys.
- (fiction) A work of fiction with a slow-paced plot; also, such a storyline.
2021 September 6, Zack Handlen, “Rick And Morty ends its fifth season looking for an escape hatch”, in The A.V. Club:The second episode of tonight’s two part finale is the culmination of a storyline first introduced way back in the first season (episode ten, “Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind”). That aired over seven years ago. Even shows that pay very close attention to serialization rarely manage that kind of slow burn.
2023 May 2, Cath Clarke, “Wolf Garden review – English rural werewolf horror is a major slow burn”, in The Guardian:You might politely describe this werewolf thriller set in the English countryside, in which the werewolf is kept off-camera, as a slow-burn. A devastating revelation awaits us at the end, but for the first two-ish-thirds of the movie we watch a man in a cottage […] looking alarmed and perturbed, possibly having a psychotic breakdown.
2024 June 16, Lucy Popescu, “The Cursed Friend by Beatrice Salvioni review – rebels with a cause”, in The Observer:Despite its dramatic opening, this is a slow burn of a novel. Salvioni might not display the flair of [Elena] Ferrante, but Francesca and Maddalena are vibrant characters for whom we quickly root.
- (fiction, fandom slang) A romantic story (especially a work of fan fiction) in which the central relationship develops slowly.
2018, Francesca DiPiazza, Fandom: Fic Writers, Vidders, Gamers, Artists, and Cosplayers, page 30:Another familiar trope, the slow burn, teases the reader as characters secretly pine for one another . . . for a long time.
2019, Robinwritesallthethings, “porn with plot”, in Lemon, page 62:Slow burns are torture. Why wait? I want my characters getting down and dirty ASAP, and there's nothing wrong with that.
2021, Aditi Dubey, “Considering Fanfic”, in Rabbit Hole, number 1, Australian National University, page 33:On some nights, I want a good long, juicy 70k word slowburn, mutual pining, angst (with a happy ending, of course, I'm not a monster).
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:slow burn.
Derived terms
Adjective
slow burn (comparative more slow burn, superlative most slow burn)
- Alternative form of slow-burn.
References