mean streak
Appearance
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]mean streak (plural mean streaks)
- (idiomatic) A defect in character characterized by persistent nastiness, viciousness, or malevolence.
- 1911, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, chapter 1, in The Crux:
- "He's worse than mischievous," Mr. Lane assured her sourly. "There's a mean streak in that family."
- 1993 May 14, Janet Maslin, “Film: A Western in the Hands of a Revisionist”, in New York Times, retrieved 14 Sept 2017:
- The film's considerable taste for graphic, noisy violence becomes clear during this tumultuous opening. So does its mean streak, as the Colonel delivers outrageous insults to one and all.
- 2016 March 10, Paul Hayward, “Sport: Eddie Jones takes England siege mentality to the extreme”, in Telegraph, UK, retrieved 14 Sept 2017:
- England’s combative coach . . . wants aggression, a touch of the outlaw, a mean streak.