Uriah Heep
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English
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]Uriah Heep
- A fictional character, Uriah Heep, in the 1850 Charles Dickens novel David Copperfield, noted for his cloying humility, obsequiousness, and insincerity, the stereotypical yes man.
Noun
[edit]Uriah Heep (plural Uriah Heeps)
- (by extension) Someone like the fictional character Uriah Heep.
- 1869, "Semi-Detached Wives", The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, New Series, Vol IX, no. 3 (March 1869) page 352
- She is the Uriah Heep of society, humbling herself before the Church and the Law, whispering sweetly her vow to honor and obey, hugging her chains as a chattel and a slave.
- 1922 January 28, “Talks with the Doctor”, in Drug Trade Weekly, volume V, number 4, page 184:
- It seems to me that misinterpretation of this 'customer is always right' business has too frequently resulted in a complete misunderstanding of the relations of merchant and customer and has made ‘Uriah Heeps’ out of too many shopkeepers.
- 2006, Andrei Rogachevskii, “The West in Russian literature”, in Andrew Hammond, editor, Cold War Literature: Writing the Global Conflict[1], Routledge:
- In the conclusion, the poet expresses his hopes that, in the future, Russia and Britain might find themselves locked in a friendly embrace, but only after all the Uriah Heeps of the British nation have been buried.
- Synonyms: bootlicker, brown noser, yes man
- 1869, "Semi-Detached Wives", The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, New Series, Vol IX, no. 3 (March 1869) page 352
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]yes man — see yes man
Verb
[edit]Uriah Heep (third-person singular simple present Uriah Heeps, present participle Uriah Heeping, simple past and past participle Uriah Heeped)
- To be a yes man, in the style of Uriah Heep.
- 1978, Susan Darter Hunt, "A Matter of Irreconcilable Differences", The North American Review, volume 263, No. 1 (Spring, 1978) page 34
- But he'd Uriah-Heeped himself into yet another corner from which she refused to extricate him.
- 1980, G. Gordon Liddy, Will: The Autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy[2], St. Martin's Press:
- Time and time again, as Silbert Uriah Heeped his way through the trial, every other word to Sirica modified with a fawning "if the court please" until everyone was sick of it, Glanzer would pull on his coattail, whisper in his ear, and steer him from the brink of error.
- 2013, Herbert Lieberman, City of the Dead, Open Road Media, page 199:
- And Strang sitting there before the Mayor in the leather-mahogany sanctum sanctorum of City Hall, bowing and scraping, genuflecting like a mandarin, dizzy with adulation, and Uriah Heeping before that exalted personage, His Honor the Mayor.
- Synonym: brownnose
- 1978, Susan Darter Hunt, "A Matter of Irreconcilable Differences", The North American Review, volume 263, No. 1 (Spring, 1978) page 34
Translations
[edit]to be a yes man, in the style of Uriah Heep — see brownnose