happy camper
English
Etymology
The Dictionary of American Slang suspects the phrase to have originated among California movie and show-business people and suspects the reference is to child clients of summer camps.[1]
Noun
happy camper (plural happy campers)
- Used other than with a figurative or idiomatic meaning: see happy camper.
- (chiefly US, informal) One who is thoroughly content or satisfied.
- I will be a happy camper when they fix the potholes on my commute.
- 1989 April 26, Shirley Marlow, “Quayle Visits Samoa, Decides He'll Give It a Break”, in Los Angeles Times:
- “You all look like happy campers to me,” Dan Quayle to the people of American Samoa.
- 2008, Deepa Kumar, quoting Ron Carey, Outside the Box: Corporate Media, Globalization, and the UPS Strike, Appendix, page 194:
- I had kept telling people that this company would be looking for a victim to pay for this. They would not let it go. And it wasn't just them—look at all the Mob guys I threw out of the union. They weren't happy campers.
- Synonym: happy bunny
References
- “happy camper” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present, retrieved June 26, 2015.
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