different between barefaced vs flippant

barefaced

English

Alternative forms

  • bare-faced
  • barefast

Etymology

Perhaps an alteration of barefast (compare shamefast); or from bare +? faced

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?be?(?)fe?st/

Adjective

barefaced (comparative more barefaced, superlative most barefaced)

  1. Undisguisedly offensive and bold; crude.
    Synonyms: brazen, coarse
  2. Open, undisguised.
    Synonym: bald-faced
  3. Unbearded (not having a beard or other facial hair).
    Synonym: clean-shaven
  4. Unmasked (not wearing a mask) or not wearing a face covering.
    Synonym: bareface

Translations

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flippant

English

Etymology

1595, from Northern English dialectal flippand (prattling, babbling, glib), present participle of flip (to babble), of North Germanic origin. Cognate with Icelandic fleipa (to babble, prattle), Swedish dialectal flepa (to talk nonsense). Alteration of -and suffix (a variant of the participial -ing) to -ant probably due to influence from words in -ant.

Pronunciation

  • (US, UK) IPA(key): /?fl?.p?nt/

Adjective

flippant (comparative more flippant, superlative most flippant)

  1. (archaic) glib; speaking with ease and rapidity
    • November 5, 1673, Isaac Barrow, sermon on the Gunpowder Treason
      It becometh good men, in such cases, to be pleasantly flippant and free in their speech.
  2. (chiefly dialectal) nimble; limber.
  3. Showing disrespect through a casual attitude, levity, and a lack of due seriousness; pert.
    • 1790, Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France
      a sort of flippant, vain discourse
    • 1998, Sylvia Brownrigg, The Metaphysical Touch
      The conversations had grown more adult over the years—she was less flippant, at least.
    • 2000, Anthony Howard and Jason Cowley, Decline and Fall, New Statesman, March 13, 2000
      In the mid-1950s we both wrote for the same weekly, where her contributions were a good deal more serious and less flippant than mine.
    • 2004, Allen Carr, The Easy Way to Stop Smoking, page 147
      Our society treats smoking flippantly as a slightly distasteful habit that can injure your health. It is not. It is drug addiction.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:cheeky

Antonyms

  • serious

Derived terms

  • flippancy

Translations

See also

  • irreverent
  • pert
  • facetious
  • frivolous

Further reading

  • flippant in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • flippant in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fli.p??/

Adjective

flippant (feminine singular flippante, masculine plural flippants, feminine plural flippantes)

  1. (Europe, informal) Surprising.
  2. (Europe, informal) Worrying; scary.

Verb

flippant

  1. present participle of flipper

Further reading

  • “flippant” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

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