McMansion
English
Etymology
Noun
McMansion (plural McMansions)
- (informal, derogatory, chiefly US) A large, imposing and ostentatious house that lacks architectural integrity.
- 1998 September 19, “Getting Smart About Art of Living Small”, in Los Angeles Times[2]:
- After decades of ever-rising square footage in the McMansions that dot the suburbs, the idea of downsizing is gaining champions.
- 2006, Rita Mae Brown, The Hounds and the Fury, Center Point Pub., →ISBN, page 112:
- They're ignorant of their social status. They think because they've built a McMansion on twenty acres, they're elite—if you can stand that word.
- 2016, Melissa Broder, So Sad Today, Grand Central:
- Such places exist, and they exist just north of the Golden Gate Bridge, through the rainbow tunnel, where McMansions meet divination on Highway 1, Marin County, California.
- 2020 February 27, Peter Jakubowicz, “The Drunk Men I Drive Around Every Night”, in Slate Magazine[3]:
- He got out and ambled noisily into his dark, cavernous house. After leaving him and others eerily like him off at their McMansions, I often worry about who else might be inside those houses. My kids would be terrified if I came home like that at 3 a.m.
- 2025 May 6, Ross Douthat, “Lifestyles of the Rich and Miserable”, in The New York Times[4], →ISSN:
- […] although the show deliberately showcases various luxury goods […] , the overall ambience is extraordinarily bare of style and beauty, offering instead a world of blah décor, undistinguished fashions and cavernous homes that just look like overpriced McMansions.