ski-jump nose

English

Alternative forms

Noun

Caricature of US President Richard Nixon, exaggerating his well-known ski-jump nose

ski-jump nose (plural ski-jump noses)

  1. (idiomatic) A long nose with an inwardly curving ridge and a tip that curves somewhat upward, resembling the shape of a downhill ramp used in the sport of ski jumping.
    • 1960 January 18, "The Press: The Old Caricature," Time (retrieved 5 April 2018):
      [T]he liberal Democratic image of Vice President Richard M. Nixon as a jowly, blue-jawed villain with a ski-jump nose has receded in the light of his growing stature.
    • 1993 January 31, Robert Butler, "In the middle and on the edge: Zoe Wanamaker," Independent (UK) (retrieved 5 April 2018):
      There's a feline swish to her figure. . . . The image does not go away as you take in her slow eyes, long, ski-jump nose and thin upper lip.
    • 2003 July 29, Vincent Canby, "Arts: Road to Ubiquity," New York Times (retrieved 5 April 2018):
      In reference to his famous profile, dominated by his ski-jump nose, Mr. Hope once commented that after his birth, "My mother thought the doctor had left the stork and taken the baby."
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