different between wiseacre vs besserwisser

wiseacre

English

Etymology

From Middle Dutch wijssegger (soothsayer), from Old High German w?zzago, w?zago (wise man, prophet, soothsayer), from Proto-West Germanic *w?tag? (wise one; prophet). Cognate with Old English w?tega (wise man, prophet). See also German Weissager (soothsayer, seer).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?wa?ze?k?(?)/

Noun

wiseacre (plural wiseacres)

  1. One who feigns knowledge or cleverness; one who is wisecracking; an insolent upstart.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:know-it-all
    • 1869, Mark Twain, the Innocents Abroad, Random House (2003), pages 298-299
      That other class of wiseacres who twist prophecy in such a manner as to make it promise the destruction and desolation of the same city, use judgement just as bad, since the city is in a very flourishing condition now, unhappily for them.
  2. (obsolete) A learned or wise man. [from before 1600]

Derived terms

  • wiseacring

Translations

wiseacre From the web:

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besserwisser

Danish

Etymology

Borrowed from German Besserwisser.

Noun

besserwisser (singular definite c, plural indefinite besserwisser)

  1. a know-it-all

Synonyms

  • klogeåge

Finnish

Etymology

Borrowed from German Besserwisser.

Noun

besserwisser

  1. know-it-all

Declension


Swedish

Etymology

Borrowed from German Besserwisser.

Noun

besserwisser c

  1. a know-it-all
    Du är en sådan där Messerschmitt! ? Det heter faktiskt besserwisser.
    You're such a Messerschmitt! ? It's actually called Besserwisser.

Declension

besserwisser From the web:

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