grumpy pants
See also: grumpypants and grumpy-pants
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
grumpy pants (plural grumpy pants)
- (countable, informal, sometimes used attributively) Synonym of grump (“person who is currently in a bad mood or is habitually cranky”).
- Coordinate terms: bossy pants, scaredy pants
- Near-synonym: bitchy-pants
- 1954, Philip Wylie, The Best of Crunch and Des, Rinehart, page 360:
- "You fish, pal. Old grumpy-pants doesn't own the ocean!"
- 2012, Ellie Daines, Lolly Luck[1], Anderson Press Limited, →ISBN:
- I was worried the supply teacher would be some grumpy-pants who liked sending kids out of the room if they dared to interrupt while they were speaking.
- 2013, Eve Langlais, B785: Cyborg Romance, self-published, →ISBN, page 74:
- “Charming, there you are. I've been looking all over for you. Grumpy pants here wouldn't tell me where you went.”
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:grumpy pants.
- (uncountable, informal) A notional pair of pants worn by someone in a bad mood.
- Coordinate terms: big-boy pants, big-girl pants
- Near-synonym: bitchy pants
- We asked him to take off his grumpy pants and put on his big-boy pants.
- 2011, C. J. Castano, Forbidden Innocence, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 115:
- "What is everyone's problem this morning? Did everyone wake up with their grumpy pants on?"
- 2011, Scott Semegran, The Spectacular Simon Burchwood[2], Sugar Skull Books, →ISBN:
- "Well, look who put on his grumpy pants today?" Gina said, punching me in the arm. She was really starting to get on my last goddamn nerves.
- 2013, Edward Viljoen, The Power of Meditation: An Ancient Technique to Access Your Inner Power[3], Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, →ISBN:
- I notice that when I move through the world at this pace, I tend to do what a friend calls “wearing my grumpy pants.”