hissy
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhɪsi/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -ɪsi
Adjective
hissy (comparative hissier, superlative hissiest)
- Accompanied with hisses.
- Making a hissing sound.
- 2003 May 8, David Pogue, “STATE OF THE ART; For Two-Way Radios, a Mileage Test”, in The New York Times[1]:
- Each is very inexpensive ($60 per two-pack for the Midland, $100 a pair for the Audiovox), and feels it. Each is also tiny, no bigger than a bar of Ivory. Both are far hissier than their more expensive rivals, and don't have as much range (more on this in a moment).
- Childish or petulant.
- 1996 May 13, David E. Thigpen, “If You Could Hear Her Now”, in Time:
- Viewers were aghast. . . . As co-host Regis Philbin flinched, Gifford launched into a teary, it's-not-my-fault, TV hissy fit: "You can say I'm ugly, you can say I'm not talented, but when you say I don't care about children, how dare you!"
- 2016 March 30, Ligaya Mishan, “Jesse Tyler Ferguson Skewers Food Culture on Broadway”, in The New York Times[2]:
- Midwestern-bred and still wholesome despite his exposure to New York’s hissiest, Sam remains the play’s anchor.
Synonyms
- (making a hissing sound): hissing, sibilant; see also Thesaurus:sibilant
- (childish): infantile, milky; see also Thesaurus:childish
- (petulant): bad-tempered, huffy, irritable; see also Thesaurus:irritable
Derived terms
Noun
hissy (plural hissies)