Tall, dark and handsome

"Tall, dark and handsome" is a phrase that refers to an appealing man, often found in romantic fiction aimed at women.[1] The term came to prominent use in the early 1900s and was commonly used in Hollywood during the 1920s to describe Rudolph Valentino.[2] As an idiom it is both lexically and sequentially fixed.[3]

Beauty standards

David Puts, an associate professor of anthropology at Pennsylvania State University who has studied the evolutionary bases of human sexuality stated when asked if the stereotype holds any weight that his initial answer was yes, but that not enough cross-cultural work had been conducted to be very confident about the question.[4]

gollark: #15 is using *camel case* for some reason, how contrapythonic.
gollark: sonata's apparently caused an out of memory error. Which one looks OOM-y?
gollark: There seem to be lisp and forth interpreters?
gollark: Also with citrons' known knowledge of python socket server software.
gollark: #9 looks VERY citronic, especially with its not very hidden complaint about the US.

See also

References

  1. Nigel Rees; Mark My Words: Great Quotations and the Stories Behind Them - page: 564
  2. L. F. Shitova ; 350 Idioms with Their Origin, or The Idiomatic Cake You Can Eat and Have It Too - page: 130
  3. Chitra Fernando; Idioms and Idiomaticity - page: 30
  4. Sarah Sloat (November 20, 2017). "The Science of 'Tall, Dark, and Handsome' Is Extremely Complicated". Inverse. Retrieved 2019-06-30.

Further reading

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