stroppy
English
Etymology
From obstropulous, common slang in British Isles for obstreperous, + -y.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈstɹɒpi/
- Rhymes: -ɒpi
Adjective
stroppy (comparative stroppier, superlative stroppiest)
- (Britain, Australia, New Zealand, slang) Ornery, fractious, belligerent, or obstreperous, and hence difficult to deal with.
- 2004, Simon Brett, The Hanging in the Hotel, Pan Macmillan UK, unnumbered page,
- Her shape and posture shadowed her daughter′s, though Kerry carried herself with more attitude, a stroppier jutting of the hips than her mother.
- 2010, Gillian Bloxham, W. Doyle Gentry, Anger Management For Dummies, UK Edition, unnumbered page,
- Even today, women who show signs of anger and who express themselves in some assertive way may be labelled stroppy for doing so.
- 2010, Alexandra Bell, Rising to the Deadline: One Woman's Sexy Climb to the Top in Newspapers, Trafford Publishing, Canada, page 140,
- The people who actually produced the paper, mainly the printers, were a stroppier lot, with a more aggressive union.
- 2010, Sophie Kinsella (Madeleine Wickham), Mini Shopaholic, page 341,
- Davina told me earlier that Luke was the stroppiest patient she′d ever had and that he′d given her a lecture on how ineflicient and time-wasting her medical was.
- 2004, Simon Brett, The Hanging in the Hotel, Pan Macmillan UK, unnumbered page,
Derived terms
See also
- strop (unrelated)
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