happy camper

English

Etymology

The Dictionary of American Slang suspects the phrase to have originated among California movie and show-business people and suspects the reference is to child clients of summer camps.

Noun

happy camper (plural happy campers)

  1. (chiefly US, informal) One who is thoroughly content or satisfied.
    Synonym: happy bunny
    I will be a happy camper when they fix the potholes on my commute.
    • 1989 April 26, Shirley Marlow, “Quayle Visits Samoa, Decides He'll Give It a Break”, in Los Angeles Times:
      “You all look like happy campers to me,” Dan Quayle to the people of American Samoa.
    • 1997, Roz Denny Fox, Sweet Tibby Mack, page 132:
      "Call, but you can't fight union regulations" / "You're probably right. Still, their boss needs to know I'm not a happy camper."
    • 2008, Deepa Kumar, quoting Ron Carey, Outside the Box: Corporate Media, Globalization, and the UPS Strike, Appendix, page 194:
      I had kept telling people that this company would be looking for a victim to pay for this. They would not let it go. And it wasn't just them—look at all the Mob guys I threw out of the union. They weren't happy campers.
  2. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see happy, camper.

References

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