Pooterish
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the name of the character Charles Pooter in George and Weedon Grossmith's 1892 novel The Diary of a Nobody.
Adjective
[edit]Pooterish (comparative more Pooterish, superlative most Pooterish)
- Characteristic of the character Charles Pooter; of modest social status, especially when having pretensions of greater significance and status.
- 1980, The Listener - Volume 103, page 378:
- The volume begins, though, with Byron being petty and Pooterish — if it is possible for such a non-family man to be Pooterish.
- 2008, Chris Rojek, Brit-Myth: Who Do the British Think They Are?, →ISBN:
- The vegetative eugenics practised in mild-mannered cul-de-sacs, the extreme prejudice of poisoning some blameless green thing while feeding another, are symptoms of Pooterish yearning for a fascist order (p. 161).
- 2013, Tony Whitehead, Mike Leigh, →ISBN, page 43:
- That said, it produces a great comic creation in Alan Dixon (Richard Kane), a splendidly Pooterish middle-aged clerk, fixated with unctuous reverence on the activities of British royalty and the aristocracy, including one or two of the firm's clients.