Woosterism
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Wooster + -ism, after Bertie Wooster, the protagonist of P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves series of comic novels.
Noun
[edit]Woosterism (countable and uncountable, plural Woosterisms)
- foppish, affected speech or behaviour
- 2001, Tony Vaux, The Selfish Altruist: Relief Work in Famine and War, page 10:
- Employers, still influenced by a touch of 1930s Woosterism, liked the idea of recruiting a young graduate who had had a fling or two, even if it was with socialism.
- 2006, Mitzi Brunsdale, Gumshoes: A Dictionary of Fictional Detectives, page 12:
- In his earliest appearances he favors an upper-class drawl and inane Bertie Woosterisms masking bursts of insight that solve frustrating cases his stolid friend Inspector Charles Parker cannot fathom.
- 2009, John Banville, The Untouchable:
- 'Ah, the Julian calendar, yes. What-ho for jolly old Julian.'
I winced; he never sounded more Jewish than when he came out with these Woosterisms.