pouty

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

pout +‎ -y

Adjective[edit]

pouty (comparative poutier, superlative poutiest)

  1. Tending to pout; angry in a childish or cute way; showing mock anger. (of a person)
    Synonyms: sulky, sullen
    • 1799, Cassandra Leigh Cook, Battleridge, London: Cawthorn, Volume 1, Chapter 5, p. 77,[1]
      ‘My dear Doctor,’ said he, ‘this wrathful man thinks you have been unsuccessful, and is primed to be pouty; let us enjoy the pleasure of discovery by a little delay; []
    • 1981, Tony Morrison, Tar Baby[2], New York: New American Library, published 1983, page 72:
      Long ago when Jade used to come for holiday visits, Margaret found her awkward and pouty, but now that she was grown up, she was pretty and a lot of fun.
  2. Shaped into a pout; (of lips) protruding (often implying sulkiness or flirtiness). (of a mouth)
    • 1851, Donald Grant Mitchell (as Ik. Marvel.), Dream Life, New York: Scribner, Chapter 5, pp. 239-240,[3]
      Was there ever a baby seen, or even read of, like that baby! [] he is a little pouty about the mouth—but such a mouth!
    • 1969, Maya Angelou, chapter 16, in I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings[4], New York: Random House, page 104:
      Those girls, who could have been her daughters, were beautiful. [] Their mouths were pouty little cupid’s bows.
    • 2016, Paul Beatty, chapter 6, in The Sellout[5], New York: Picador, page 84:
      a pale brunette whose pouty Maybelline red lips put Scarlett O’Hara’s sneer to shame
  3. Characterized by pouting. (of an action or quality)
    • 2002, Julian Barnes, Something to Declare[6], London: Picador, page 278:
      Where other actresses offer us a sort of pouty boredom which yet seeks to flirt with the audience, Huppert presents severity, anger, and an irritation raised to the condition of nausea.
    • 2006, Gary Shteyngart, Absurdistan, London: Granta, 2008, Chapter 27, p. 214,[7]
      Only their full red lips bore similarity, the father’s bubbly wedges endowing him with a drag queen’s pouty glamour.
    • 2016, Colson Whitehead, The Underground Railroad[8], London: Fleet, page 157:
      He suffered on his journey, delivering a pouty soliloquy on hunger, cold, and wild beasts.

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Czech[edit]

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Noun[edit]

pouty n

  1. instrumental plural of pouto