paparazzo in English

noun
1
a freelance photographer who pursues celebrities to get photographs of them.
He is uncomfortable with the way soap stars can be photographed by the paparazzi at their worst.

Use "paparazzo" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "paparazzo" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "paparazzo", or refer to the context using the word "paparazzo" in the English Dictionary.

1. The paparazzo may not be well-liked.

2. Andy: Sound like you are a paparazzo.

3. Andy: Sound like you are a real paparazzo.

4. Hit a paparazzo? No, I would not do that!

5. What we need is a real president, not a paparazzo!

6. As an Italian family name Paparazzo is said to be common in Calabria.

7. A paparazzo has pleaded innocent to snapping private shots of the film star.

8. Police say he punched a paparazzo in the head, sending him to the floor.

9. Synonyms for Cameraman include camera operator, cameraperson, photographer, cinematographer, cinematographist, filmer, shutterbug, lensman, paparazzo and photog

10. Since September, Deep Impact has been stalking Hartley 2 like a paparazzo, taking images every 5 minutes and gathering data.

11. It sounded like a poor excuse for a job, traveling with a no-name band as their official paparazzo.

12. Since September, Deep Impact has been stalking Hartley 2 like a paparazzo, taking images every 5 minutes and gathering data. It's the first craft to visit two comets.

13. Brazilian Portuguese uses the trigraph ⟨tch⟩ /tʃ/ for loanwords; e.g., tchau, 'ciao', tcheco 'Czech', República Tcheca 'Czech Republic', tchê 'che' (this latter is regional), etc. European Portuguese normally replace the trigraph ⟨tch⟩ with ⟨ch⟩ /ʃ/: chau, checo, República Checa, etc. Both Spanish and Portuguese use ⟨zz⟩ /ts/ (never as /dz/ – this sequence appears only in loanwords from Japanese, e.g., adzuki) for some Italian loanwords, but in Portuguese may sometimes not be pronounced as affricate, but having an epenthetic /i/ or /ɨ/; e.g., Sp. and Port. pizza 'pizza', Sp. and Port. paparazzo 'paparazzo', etc. Spanish also utilizes ⟨tz⟩ /ts/ for Basque, Catalan and Nahuatl loanwords, and ⟨tl⟩ /tɬ/ (or /tl/) for Nahuatl loanwords; e.g., Ertzaintza, quetzal, xoloitzcuintle, Tlaxcala, etc. Portuguese utilizes ⟨ts⟩ for German, originarily ⟨z⟩, and Japanese loanwords.