stuffed shirt
See also: stuffed-shirt
English
    
WOTD – 6 November 2010
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
    
- Audio (AU) - (file) 
Noun
    
stuffed shirt (plural stuffed shirts)
- (idiomatic, informal) One who is pompous or self-important, especially one who is officious in a position of authority.
-  1914, Samuel Hopkins Adams, chapter 30, in The Clarion:- "Don't you come the high-and-holy on me. You and your smooth, big, phony stuffed-shirt of a father."
 
-  1941, Herman J. Mankiewicz; Orson Welles, Citizen Kane, RKO Radio Pictures, spoken by Jedediah Leland (Joseph Cotten):- Bernstein, am I a stuffed shirt? Am I a horse-faced hypocrite? Am I a New England school marm?
 
-  1944, W[illiam] Somerset Maugham, The Razor's Edge, Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Doran, →OCLC, page 208:- “Oh? I remember, you came to Chicago once. Bit of a stuffed shirt, aren't you?”
 
-  1952 May 26, “Medicine: Mind Matters”, in Time, archived from the original on 2012-12-01:- Dr. Laughlin was the only one in a movie party who detested the second male lead—"I regarded him as overserious, pedantic, a stuffed shirt."
 
 
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- (usually hyphenated) Used attributively.
Translations
    
one who is overly-officious
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See also
    
References
    
- “stuffed shirt”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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