Stepford
English
Etymology 2
A fictional place name.
After the fictional suburb in the 1972 novel The Stepford Wives by Ira Levin, and in two films of the same name based on the novel.
Adjective
Stepford (not comparable)
- Docile, unthinking and conformist.
- 1999, Mary Higgins Clark, We'll Meet Again, page 131:
- “He called you a boring Stepford wife.”
- A boring Stepford wife, Molly thought. For a moment it seemed to her that she was once more in prison, eating the tasteless food, hearing the click of locks, lying awake for sleepless night after sleepless night.
- 2011 July 18, Matt Culkin, “The 16 Most Hilariously Dishonest Old School Advertisements”, Cracked.com:
- Were the Nazis trying to infiltrate the U.S. Navy with an army of gonorrhea-infected Stepford clones?
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- Attractive but lacking any character.
Related terms
- Stepfordian
References
- OED 2004
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