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from the sublime to the ridiculous
Fig. from something fine and uplifting to something ridiculous or mundane. After Mr. Jones had introduced my wife to his wife, he jokingly turned to introduce me and said, "From the sublime to the ridiculous." After the opera singer finished, the master of ceremonies introduced the comic juggler saying, "From the sublime to the ridiculous...."
From the sublime to the ridiculous is only a step.
Prov. Something grand can easily become very funny. Bob, I don't think you should include a bowl of breakfast cereal in your still-life painting. From the sublime to the ridiculous is only a step. The production of Macbeth went from the sublime to the ridiculous when Lady Macbeth came onstage in an old army uniform.
make someone look ridiculous
to make someone look foolish (not funny). This hat makes me look ridiculous. Please make me look good. Don't make me look ridiculous!
from the ridiculous to the sublime
See: from the sublime to the ridiculousfrom the sublime to the ridiculous
from something that is very good to something that is very bad or silly
The performances at the festival ranged from the sublime to the ridiculous. Usage notes: also used in the form from the ridiculous to the sublime
from the sublime to the ridiculous
from something that is very good or very serious to something that is very bad or silly The evening went from the sublime to the ridiculous, an hour-long piano recital followed by two hours of karaoke.
from the sublime to the ridiculous
From the beautiful to the silly, from great to puny. For example, They played first Bach and then an ad jingle-from the sublime to the ridiculous. The reverse, from the ridiculous to the sublime, is used with the opposite meaning. Coined by Tom Paine in The Age of Reason (1794), in which he said the two are so closely related that it is but one step from one to the other, the phrase has been often repeated in either order.
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Annika | | AHN-nee-kah (Swedish, Dutch, Finnish), AH-nee-kah (German), AN-i-kə (English), AHN-i-kə (English) | Swedish, Dutch, Finnish, German, English (Modern) |
Katarine | | kah-tah-REE-nə | German |
YaĞMur | | yah:-MOOR | Turkish |
Geoffroi | | - | Medieval French |
Odo | | - | Ancient Germanic |
Christel | | KRIS-tel | German |