Freedonia

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Freedonia an entity of type: Thing

Freedonia, Fredonia or Fredon is the name given to several fictional countries. The name was used for some aspects of the United States in the 19th century, and later popularized by the 1933 Marx Brothers film Duck Soup where it was the name of the fictional country in which the film was set. Over time, the word has come to have a more generic meaning, anything from a noun describing a plausible yet fictional country, to an adjective ("Freedonian") used to characterize a place like the Freedonia of Duck Soup. Because the Marx Brothers' film had so many qualities—autocracy, diminutiveness, and obscurity, to name but a few—a place can be described as "Freedonian" for having any one of these qualities. rdf:langString
Fridonia (Freedonia) es el primer nombre que, en vez del demónimo "americano", probablemente usaron los estadounidenses inmediatamente después de la Revolución de las Trece Colonias.​ Después se popularizó por la película Sopa de ganso, de los Hermanos Marx, donde Libertonia era un país ficticio. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Freedonia
rdf:langString Fridonia
xsd:integer 173831
xsd:integer 1073824561
xsd:integer 23969 73717
rdf:langString Duck Soup
rdf:langString Fridonia (Freedonia) es el primer nombre que, en vez del demónimo "americano", probablemente usaron los estadounidenses inmediatamente después de la Revolución de las Trece Colonias.​ Después se popularizó por la película Sopa de ganso, de los Hermanos Marx, donde Libertonia era un país ficticio. Luego la palabra ha evolucionado a un significado más genérico. Puede ser sustantivo, como el país ficticio, o su derivado adjetivo "fridonio", usado para caracterizar un lugar como la Freedonia de Duck Soup. Porque ésta incluía demasiadas cualidades adversas —autocracia, pequeñez, obscuridad, etcétera—, un lugar al que se le puede calificar de "fridoniano", por existir en él cualquiera de estas deficiencias.
rdf:langString Freedonia, Fredonia or Fredon is the name given to several fictional countries. The name was used for some aspects of the United States in the 19th century, and later popularized by the 1933 Marx Brothers film Duck Soup where it was the name of the fictional country in which the film was set. Over time, the word has come to have a more generic meaning, anything from a noun describing a plausible yet fictional country, to an adjective ("Freedonian") used to characterize a place like the Freedonia of Duck Soup. Because the Marx Brothers' film had so many qualities—autocracy, diminutiveness, and obscurity, to name but a few—a place can be described as "Freedonian" for having any one of these qualities.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 14678
xsd:string 0023969

data from the linked data cloud