happy talk

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Noun[edit]

happy talk (uncountable)

  1. (set phrase, hyphenated when used attributively) Lighthearted, pleasant conversation; upbeat banter; optimistic remarks.
    • 1888, G. A. Henty, chapter 15, in In The Reign Of Terror:
      Dr. Sandwith soon afterwards ran out to the excited chattering group in the garden, and after a few minutes' happy talk with him, Harry spoke to him of the visitors.
    • 1992 February 17, Maureen Dowd, “The 1992 Campaign”, in New York Times, retrieved 5 August 2014:
      "Maybe the public is waking up and getting skeptical about simple public relations, effortless, happy-talk rhetoric," he said.
    • 1993 June 27, “Commentary: Suddenly, The Rah Rah President”, in Businessweek, retrieved 5 August 2014:
      Clinton's upbeat tone marked his passage from econo-pessimist to cheerleader. Some observers give new mediameister David R. Gergen, who learned happy talk at the knee of Ronald Reagan, credit for the shift.
    • 2007 June 28, Holly Bailey, “To Be Perfectly Honest . . .”, in Newsweek, retrieved 5 August 2014:
      "Now have there been missteps? Of course." Among them, he admits, Dick Cheney's happy talk about the insurgency in Iraq being in its "last throes."
    • 2010 July 29, Michael Grunwald, “The BP Spill: Has the Damage Been Exaggerated?”, in Time, retrieved 5 August 2014:
      Even BP fall guy Tony Hayward, after some early happy talk, admitted that the spill was an "environmental catastrophe."

Usage notes[edit]

2007 February 8, Patricia Sullivan, “Frank N. Magid dies at 78, created news anchor "happy talk"”, in Washington Post, retrieved 5 August 2014:
"Action News" and its rival, "Eyewitness News," demonstrated both the untapped possibilities of the medium and the opportunity to devolve into "happy talk" between serious segments.

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References[edit]