prissy

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
11
Words With Friends
11
Letters
6
Pronunciation
/ˈpɹɪsi/

Definition of prissy

5 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. (colloquial)Prim and fussy; too precise; overparticular.
    “She was a small, neat, rather prissy-looking girl with primly smooth brown hair and rimless glasses […]”
    “As Nathanial Mayweather, heir to the Mayweather Hotel fortune, Elliott doesn’t disdain the hoi polloi so much as he considers everyone, even the faculty and headmaster at the prissiest private school in existence, to be part of it.”
    “European languages like English are just prissier about getting that pronoun in there.”
See all 5 definitions

adj

  1. (colloquial)Prim and fussy; too precise; overparticular.
    “She was a small, neat, rather prissy-looking girl with primly smooth brown hair and rimless glasses […]”
    “As Nathanial Mayweather, heir to the Mayweather Hotel fortune, Elliott doesn’t disdain the hoi polloi so much as he considers everyone, even the faculty and headmaster at the prissiest private school in existence, to be part of it.”
    “European languages like English are just prissier about getting that pronoun in there.”
  2. (colloquial, derogatory, usually)Lacking masculine vigor; sissified; effeminate.
    “I refused to wear this properly as it looked a bit prissy, so I butchly slung it over one shoulder.”
    “Mom was always pushing her only daughter to become some kind of prissy feminine beauty.”
    “A pink can held shaving gel with a prissy, feminine smell.”
    “Her clothes were not at all unusual or fashionable, a plain slate-blue dress and a magenta cardigan sweater with a somewhat prissy line of pearl buttons down the front.”
    “A healthy trepidation about microbes, lice and the like is the key to a happy prissy lifestyle.”
  3. (colloquial)Well-mannered; well-behaved.
    “As women post en masse over the course of the day and long into the night, the mood changes: The daylight crowd tends to be prissier; the night crowd rowdier (and drunker); the late-night crowd surrealistic and unpredictable, made up of the extremely sleep deprived, from mothers of newborns to insomniacs in the midst of a divorce.”
    “You drive like one of those prissy ladies at lunch who won't take the last cookie in case somebody else wants it.”
    “I may – I forget now – have suffixed it slightly; with a well-rounded 'Stuff you!' or 'But my car, you bastard!'. But then again, surely not. This was my boss, after all. More likely I would have said something more prissy, like 'Oh, really It may be only a car to you,' etc., before dissolving, which was what I actually did, into a flurry of impotent fury and tears.”

noun

  1. (colloquial, rare)A person who is prissy.
    “1970-1975, Lou Sullivan, personal diary, quoted in 2019, Ellis Martin, Zach Ozma (editors), We Both Laughed In Pleasure I really like Beau. He sure enjoys being admired & lusted over. He just lays back like a king & enjoys. What a prissy!”

name

  1. A diminutive of the female given name Priscilla.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

1895, either an alteration of precise, blend of prim + sissy, or a blend of prim + fussy; first attested in a work of American writer Joel Chandler Harris.

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