rorty
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
19th century UK. Unknown etymology. Farmer (1903) categorises the term as costermongers' slang.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɹɔːti/
- Rhymes: -ɔːti
Adjective
rorty (comparative rortier, superlative rortiest)
- (Britain, informal) Boisterous, rowdy, saucy, dissipated, or risqué.
- 1898, Hichens, Robert Smythe, The Londoners, page 280:
- "Tell us a good story, Rodney — one of your rorty ones." / Mr. Rodney shrivelled. / "I fear," he murmured — "I fear I am scarcely in the — er — rorty vein to-night."
- 1932, Gibbons, Stella, Cold Comfort Farm:
- But compared with the heavy, muffling darkness of the night in which the countryside was sunk, the lights looked positively rorty
- 2007 May 31, “Lotus 2-Eleven - Road Test First Drive”, in Autocar:
- Any speed any gear it doesn't matter. The 2Eleven's got an enormous powerband huge performance and the rortiest exhaust I've heard in an Elise-based car
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:rorty.
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Derived terms
- rortiness, rorty bloke, rorty dasher, rorty toff
References
- Farmer, John Stephen (1903) Slang and Its Analogues, volume 6, page 53
- “rorty” in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press.
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