caricature

کارٹون
definition
verb
he was caricatured on the cover of TV Guide
make or give a comically or grotesquely exaggerated representation of (someone or something).
noun
a caricature of Jimmy Durante
a picture, description, or imitation of a person or thing in which certain striking characteristics are exaggerated in order to create a comic or grotesque effect.
example
a 'caricature' of Jimmy Durante
On stage, I am a 'caricature' of my normal personality which probably doesn't bode well.
there are elements of 'caricature' in the portrayal of the hero
While there is certainly an element of 'caricature' in Geikie's works they are never caricatures per se.
One of the four pictures was an old-fashioned 'caricature' of a bomb - round and black with a burning fuse.
This is the Cornwall of myth, a clichéd 'caricature' version of the county complete with exaggerated eccentrics, loony local lore and mystical happenings.
there are elements of 'caricature' in the portrayal of the hero
‘It's just fun, almost a 'caricature' version of rockabilly,’ adds the Gutter Demon's bassist Flipper.
Has some modernist thinker sat in a college, chuckling as he invents this ludicrous 'caricature' in order to discredit postmodernism once and for all?
Moving on from his Hogarthian images of the early 1990s, the elements of 'caricature' have disappeared, although he remains preoccupied with brutalisation.
he looked a 'caricature' of his normal self
He plays the role well without every going over the top or becoming a 'caricature' , and is creates an extremely sympathetic character.
Memin is a cartoon character from a decades-old and much-beloved Mexican comic book, a 'caricature' of a young, black Mexican boy.
In 1803 Gillray created a prototype 'caricature' of Napoleon which was widely copied by his competitors.
When Sinclair Lewis wrote Babbitt, he succeeded in creating a 'caricature' of success typifying the mind-set of the twenties.
a crude 'caricature' of the Prime Minister
Usually I find him insufferable, but here he had a quieter, naïve quality that made him more real, rather than a 'caricature' or mere comic foil.
The element of cartoonish 'caricature' finds its way into much of this production.
he looked like a 'caricature' of his normal self
Glover, who has a penchant for playing strange individuals, uses this opportunity not to inhabit a genuine character, but to create a 'caricature' .
His characteristic 'caricatures' of women and other subjects are all woven into a tapestry of intricate design and fused colors.
For too long, he was 'caricatured' as the playboy with the pun-friendly surname, an image to which he pandered happily until he realised its downside.
The burgled British householder used to be 'caricatured' coming down his stairway with poker in hand, while the burglar was cartooned as holding nothing more than a jemmy.
He feels compelled to present the most ludicrous 'caricatures' of modern science.
More than 800 drawings, illustrations, 'caricatures' and paintings by Beshkov have been arranged on the first three floors of the gallery offering a glance at the life and work of this prominent Bulgarian.
Never one to shy away from polemics, Gould was often criticized by other scientists for his penchant for staking debates in rather extreme terms, and sometimes 'caricaturing' his opponents' positions.
He had been 'caricatured' for his right-wing geopolitical and social policies his entire career.
The style and drafting of the Constitution also are unfairly 'caricatured' .
Full of allusions and 'caricatural' aspects, the piece is difficult and challenging, but its rich and luscious orchestration more than makes up for its complexities.
It was then that cartoonists began 'caricaturing' him as a cockatoo.
Credits: Google Translate