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Disney

[ diz-nee ]

noun

  1. Walt(er E.), 1901–66, U.S. creator and producer of animated cartoons, motion pictures, etc.


Disney

/ ˈdɪznɪ /

noun

  1. DisneyWalt(er Elias)19011966MUSFILMS AND TV: producerFILMS AND TV: animator Walt ( er Elias ). 1901–66, US film producer, who pioneered animated cartoons: noted esp for his creations Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck and films such as Fantasia (1940)
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Derived Forms

  • ˌDisneyˈesque, adjective
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Example Sentences

After regularly taking in large sums every summer — the company recorded a post-tax profit of $800 million in summer 2019 — Disney lost $700 million in the summer of 2020.

Of the major TV network groups, Disney has been most successful in building up its streaming business.

From Digiday

Moreover, if Disney and ViacomCBS secure rights to stream NFL games to people who don’t have pay-TV subscriptions, that could significantly boost their respective streaming services.

From Digiday

It’s not that esports teams are well on their way to becoming Disney doppelgangers.

From Digiday

Disney’s streaming subscribers are skyrocketing, but the average amount of money the company makes on those users is doing the opposite.

From Quartz

They married on December 19, 2013 after a romantic “Walt Disney” kind of courtship, they both said.

Reprinted by permission of Kingswell/Disney Publishing Worldwide.

Disney has a choice whether to produce a program with certain fictional characters; the storyline could be re-written or changed.

He was an on-and-off drug addict and sometimes a criminal; he was a collector of switchblades and vintage Disney T-shirts.

“The night he sold The Sixth Sense to Disney, we were all together for dinner in LA,” Nagrani recalls.

"Well, that did seem to be Mr Disney's view," said Southend.

With a quick jerk of his head Disney began to walk on slowly.

"Everybody else I've met has been horribly afraid of Mr Disney," she said in a half-whisper.

"Anyhow the first thing is to sound Disney," continued Southend.

She turned her head by chance, and found Mr Disney silent too, and looking at her.

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