Meaning of troper | Babel Free
/ˈtɹəʊ.pə/Definitions
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Alternative letter-case form of troper (“a contributor to the wiki website TV Tropes”). alt-of
- One who tropes.
- A book of tropes (phrases or verses added to the Mass when sung by a choir).
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A contributor to the wiki website TV Tropes. slang
Examples
“Since its [TV Tropes’] founding in 2004, more than 42,000 people have volunteered to be “tropers” like Barbara—a mixture of fans, writers, educators and amateur academics smitten by pop culture and accessing their inner Joseph Campbell. […] There’s a section called “Troper Tales,” about the ways tropes have shown up in the tropers’ real lives. […] He [Fast Eddie] thought up the site [TV Tropes] during a discussion on Buffistas.org, a community of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” enthusiasts, a group of whom became the first tropers.”
“Thus, TV Tropes was born, an online encyclopaedia, which allows open collaboration among its contributors (the “tropers”): anyone can add pages, and edit or delete existing ones. Registration is needed for access, but it is free and instant. […] On the site, each trope and each work has its own page: these contain a short description and a list of examples, often with comments and explanations from tropers.”
“The main task of “tropers”, the name under which TVTropes contributors self-identify, is to pinpoint tropes, describe them, and match them with creative works. […] Whether a certain recurrent situation amounts to a trope, or not, is often a matter of controversy. This is why TVTropes includes a complex set of guidelines and an online debate area for tropers aiming to pinpoint a specific trope and put it into words: the “Trope Launch Pad”. […] This is also the place to find the trope “a snappy name” and to identify illustrative examples, in collaboration with other tropers.”
“Troper Tales was originally a subsection of the TV Tropes website where writers, called tropers, could share their own experiences of the tropes in real life, and which include their opinions on both those experiences and the trope itself. […] [This troper has a decent knowledge of Japanese…] […] Tsundere is actually beginning to enter this troper’s vocabulary. […] This troper suffered this fresh off his trip to Japan when he was still a OldShame failtacular teenager who thought he was cool randomly injecting Japanese swears into conversations.”
“Though tropers, as participants call themselves, started off analyzing patterns in television, the site [TV Tropes] now encompasses analysis of works across a wide variety of media, from literature and film to “real life,” which apparently adheres to storytelling conventions often enough to qualify as a medium in its own right. […] Tropers and fridge logicians have their own specialized argot and practices, some of which have made it into the public consciousness. Troper concepts such as lampshading (pointing out an inconsistency before it rises to the attention of others) and gaslighting (denying or subtly altering another’s perception of reality), among many others, emerged in fan analysis but have entered the public discourse. Tropers and fans have long recognized patterns, such as “Bury Your Gays,” or the far disproportionate tendency for gay characters and especially couples to be killed off, and “Stuffed into the Fridge,” or the gruesome murder of female characters for impact on a male character, and their specialist understanding and nomenclature has led to real awareness of, and action on, these issues.”
“Many “tropologists” (as academic scholars in the field call themselves) or “tropers” (as the contributors to TV Tropes call themselves) are interested in understanding tropes and the relations between them in comprehensive and systematic ways. […] The tropers of TV Tropes, on the other hand, are not concerned with limiting the number or determining the order of the tropes archived on the wiki site (nor do they use the term “tropology” much), but they do strive to draw very clear distinctions between the different tropes they document, and to define the relationships between those tropes (such as “super-trope” and “subtrope,” “sister tropes,” and the different ways a trope can be “played”—“straight,” “inverted,” “subverted,” etc.). […] This is an emerging toolkit… and an opportunity to dive a little deeper into the work of exemplary tropers including Kenneth Burke, the TV Tropes community, and Sara Ahmed.”
“This study explores collaborative authorship in the online wiki TV Tropes, a combination encyclopedia and dictionary of media devices, where wiki editors, or tropers, can work democratically to create new jargon (tropes) for the wiki dictionary. This quantitative study incorporates elements from both computer mediated discourse analysis (Herring, 2004) and digital conversation analysis (Giles, 2015) to analyze tropers' discussions on the Trope Launch Pad, a forum for DMC regarding proposed tropes and their definitions. […] Issues of formatting and clarity are especially salient topics as tropers strive to follow the wiki rules and to produce distinct tropes with precise definitions. […] The Trope Launch Pad and other discussion sections of the TV Tropes wiki provide an untapped data source of DMC on a unique platform where tropers not only catalogue and discuss media topics, but intentionally collaborate to create neologisms that add to the wiki's dictionary and become enduring pieces of TV Tropes' jargon.”
“As collaborators (known as “tropers”) at TVtropes.org have written, “It’s not entirely clear how sentient she is, but the Scoobies seem a little unnervingly cavalier about how they treat her.””
“Under “Deliberate Values Dissonance,” tropers note, “the filmmakers make a point about the open sexism of the time almost Once per Episode.” […] [W]hile many male characters might be openly sexist to female characters within the storyworld, tropers expect that this explicit sexism does not align with the moral attitudes of the show’s creators.”
“As for TV Tropes, I would need to be more familiar with them to identify them in a film. However, I imagine that it's a lot of fun to watch a movie with other Tropers and be calling them out as you identify them. "Loser Protagonist!" "Running Gag!"”
“This Troper finds himself using Gintama “Zura ja nai, Katsurada!” as a swear, does this also count as a Gosh Darn It to Heck?”
“Using substantial crowdsourced material, ‘Tropers’ on the popular fan wiki site, TV Tropes (2022), identify the ‘Amoral Afrikaner’ as a trope that traces back to apartheid-era South Africa, for example Lethal Weapon 2 in 1989.”
“Practitioners of this troping, or “anyone who contributes to [TV Tropes],” are called “Tropers.””
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.