blatherskite
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From blather + Old English skite (“shit”). Alternatively the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary asserts that the word is of Scottish origin, with blather/blether + skate referring to someone who is "contemptible".[1] First use of the term dates to the mid-17th century.[1] Compare cheapskate.
Noun
blatherskite (countable and uncountable, plural blatherskites)
- A voluble purveyor of nonsense; a blusterer.
- 1922, Sinclair Lewis, “chapter 32”, in Babbitt:
- Babbitt was frightened, but he had an agonized instinct that if he yielded in this he would yield in everything. He protested: “You're exaggerating, Colonel. I believe in being broad-minded and liberal, but, of course, I'm just as much agin the cranks and blatherskites and labor unions and so on as you are. […] ”
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- A worthless fellow; a deadbeat.
- Nonsense or blather; empty talk.
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