tear-mouth
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]tear-mouth (plural tear-mouths)
- (obsolete) A blustering, boisterous person.
- (obsolete, acting) An overactor.
- 1601, Ben Jonson, Poetaster, act 3, scene 1:
- You grow rich, do you, and purchase, you twopenny tear-mouth?
- 1819 April, Sir Walter Scott, [Letter to Robert Southey]:
- How would you, or how do you think I should, relish being the object of such a letter as Kean wrote t'other day to a poor author, who, though a pedantic blockhead, had at least the right to be treated as a gentleman by a copper-laced two-penny tearmouth, rendered mad by conceit and success?
Related terms
[edit]Adjective
[edit]tear-mouth (comparative more tear-mouth, superlative most tear-mouth)
Synonyms
[edit]- See also Thesaurus:noisy
References
[edit]- John S[tephen] Farmer; W[illiam] E[rnest] Henley, compilers (1904) “tear-mouth”, in Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present. […], volume VII, [London: […] Neill and Co.] […], →OCLC, page 89.