different between snappish vs peevish
snappish
English
Etymology
snap +? -ish.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?snæp??/
- Rhymes: -æp??
- Hyphenation: snap?pish
Adjective
snappish (comparative more snappish, superlative most snappish)
- Likely to snap or bite.
- A snappish cur
- 1877, Anna Sewell, Black Beauty Chapter 22[1]
- "She came to us snappish and suspicious, but when she found what sort of place ours was, it all went off by degrees
- Exhibiting irritation or impatience; curt; irascible.
- 1990, Nora Roberts, Taming Natasha, Silhouette Books (2011), ?ISBN, unnumbered page:
- She heard her own voice, snappish and rude, and pressed a hand to her head.
- 2011, Lynne McTaggart, The Bond, Simon & Schuster (2011), ?ISBN, page 91:
- Even though the woman didn't work closely with Barsade, so palpable was her complaining and snappish temperament that it had infected everyone who worked around her.
- 2011, Mary Doria Russell, Doc, Random House (2011), ?ISBN, page 173:
- There was something underneath her snappish belligerence that made him feel protective and tolerant.
- 1990, Nora Roberts, Taming Natasha, Silhouette Books (2011), ?ISBN, unnumbered page:
Derived terms
- snappishly
- snappishness
Translations
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peevish
English
Alternative forms
- pevish, pievish (both obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English pevische, pevisse, pevysse, peivesshe, also peyuesshe, peeuish, of obscure origin. Perhaps from Middle English pew, pue (“a plaintive cry, the cry of a bird”), equivalent to pue +? -ish. Cognate with Scots pevis, pevess, pevych, pevach (“peevish”), Scots pew, peu (“to cry in a plaintive manner”). See pue.
An alternative etymology derives Middle English peyvesshe (“capricious, silly”), as a possible corruption of Latin perversus (“perverted”). The meaning “fretful” develops in the 16th century.
A third suggestion links the word to classical Latin expavidus (“startled, shy”) (< ex- + pavidus) via an unrecorded variant with -ai- of Middle French espave (“stray [of animals]; foreign [of persons]; lost property, flotsam”) (first attested 1283 in Old French; Modern French épave). The semantic connection is thought to be the behaviour of stray animals. Compare -ish suffix.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?pi?v??/
- (US) IPA(key): /?piv??/
Adjective
peevish (comparative more peevish, superlative most peevish)
- Characterized by or exhibiting petty bad temper, bad-tempered, moody, cross. [from 1520]
- c. 1599, William Shakespeare, King Henry V, act III, scene 7:
- What a wretched and peevish fellow is this king of England, to mope with his fat-brained followers so far out of his knowledge!
- 1600, William Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice, act I, scene 1:
- Why should a man whose blood is warme within, / Sit like his grandsire, cut in Alabaster? / […] And creep into the Iaundies / By beeing peeuish?
- c. 1599, William Shakespeare, King Henry V, act III, scene 7:
- Constantly complaining, whining; childishly fretful.
- 1813, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, ch. 41:
- [T]he luckless Kitty continued in the parlour repining at her fate in terms as unreasonable as her accent was peevish.
- 1813, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, ch. 41:
- Easily annoyed, especially by things that are not important; irritable, querulous.
- 1917, P. G. Wodehouse, “The Mixer” in The Man With Two Left Feet and Other Stories:
- At first he was quite peevish. “What's the idea,” he said, “coming and spoiling a man's beauty-sleep? Get out.”
- 1975, Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift [Avon ed., 1976, p. 471]:
- They used to tell one about a kid asking his grumpy old man when they were walking to the park, "What's the name of this flower, Papa?" And the old guy is peevish and he yells, "How should I know? Am I in the milinery business?"
- 1917, P. G. Wodehouse, “The Mixer” in The Man With Two Left Feet and Other Stories:
- (obsolete, Northern England) Clever, expert. [18th c.]
- 1710, Thomas Ruddiman in Gawin Douglas, Virgil's Æneis, translated into Scottish verse (new edition), gloss (at cited word):
- The word peevish among the vulgar of Scotland is used for niggardly, covetous; in the North of England, for witty, subtile.
- 1710, Thomas Ruddiman in Gawin Douglas, Virgil's Æneis, translated into Scottish verse (new edition), gloss (at cited word):
- (obsolete, Canada, Northern England) Sharp, piercing, bitter (of the wind); windy, blustery (of the weather).
- 1744, John Armstrong, The art of preserving health: A poem, book I, v. 285 ff.:
- […] the ridge […] / […] defends you from the blust'ring north, / And bleak affliction of the peevish east.
- 1927, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Emily's Quest, p. 174:
- Something has happened to sour February's temper. Such a peevish month.
- 1744, John Armstrong, The art of preserving health: A poem, book I, v. 285 ff.:
- (chiefly obsolete) Perverse, refractory; headstrong, obstinate; capricious, skittish; (also) coy. [from c. 1400]
- 1539, Coverdale Bible (Cranmer Preface):
- Not onely foolyshe frowarde and obstinate but also peuysshe, peruerse and indurate.
- 1616, William Shakespeare, Two Gentlemen of Verona, act V, scene 2:
- Why, this it is, to be a peeuish Girle, / That flies her fortune when it followes her.
- 1539, Coverdale Bible (Cranmer Preface):
- (obsolete) Silly, senseless, foolish. [16th–17th c.]
- 1633, John Ford, 'Tis pitty shee's a whore, ch. 5, sig. I2v:
- This is your peeuish chattering weake old man.
- 1633, John Ford, 'Tis pitty shee's a whore, ch. 5, sig. I2v:
- (obsolete) Beside oneself; out of one's senses; mad. [16th c.]
- 1523, John Skelton, A goodly garlande or chapelet of laurell, p. 266:
- Some tremblid, some girnid, some gaspid, some gasid, As people halfe peuysshe, or men that were masyd.
- 1523, John Skelton, A goodly garlande or chapelet of laurell, p. 266:
- (obsolete) Spiteful, malignant, mischievous, harmful. [16th c.]
- 1569, Richard Grafton, A chronicle at large and meere history of the affayres of Englande and kinges of the same (first edition), ch. 2, p. 176:
- In derision of the king, they made certaine peeuishe and mocking rymes which I passe ouer.
- 1601, John Marston et al., Iacke Drums entertainment, ch. II, sig. D2v:
- This crosse, this peeuish hap, / Strikes dead my spirits like a thunderclap.
- 1569, Richard Grafton, A chronicle at large and meere history of the affayres of Englande and kinges of the same (first edition), ch. 2, p. 176:
- (obsolete) Hateful, distasteful, horrid. [16th c.]
- 1563, Thomas Becon, The displaying of the Popish masse (new edition, 1637), p. 299:
- The Lords Supper and your peevish, popish private masse doe agree together..as the common proverbe is, like harpe and harrow, or like the hare and the hound.
- 1563, Thomas Becon, The displaying of the Popish masse (new edition, 1637), p. 299:
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
Adverb
peevish (not comparable)
- (obsolete) Peevishly.
- 1602, William Shakespeare, Richard III, act IV, scene 4:
- Be not peeuish fond in great designes. [1597 ‘pieuish, fond’; 1598 ‘peeuish, fond’; Malone conjectured ‘peevish-fond’, the reading adopted in many modern editions; the Arden edition prefers ‘peevish found’.].
- 1602, William Shakespeare, Richard III, act IV, scene 4:
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