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词汇 sissy
释义

Definition of sissy in English:

sissy

(British cissy)
nounPlural sissiesˈsɪsiˈsɪsi
informal
  • A person regarded as effeminate or cowardly.

    柔弱(或怯懦)的人

    he would hate the other boys to think he was a sissy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tom thought singing was for sissies and kept his distance, but was gradually eased in.
    • Balsamic vinegar isn't just for sissies and wimps.
    • No room for cissies in the Association, said they.
    • I screamed like a sissy when I was trapped with all those spiders.
    • Weapons are for sissies who can't fight with bare hands.
    • Luke grinned, and started singing, ‘Gerald is a sissy.’
    • If we're not macho thugs, we're ineffectual sissies.
    • Don't be a sissy, go with him, his inner voice rebuked.
    • Dr Tiplady, the local physician, once found me running home in tears, and told the the boys who were chasing me that I was just a big sissy.
    • The only items on the menu would be chicken-fried steak and beer, and anyone who tried to order vegetables would be laughed at and called a sissy.
    Synonyms
    coward, weakling, milksop, Milquetoast, namby-pamby, crybaby, baby
    informal weed, softie, nancy, nancy boy, pansy, ponce, mollycoddle, chicken
    British informal wet, mummy's boy, big girl's blouse, jessie, yellow-belly, funk
    North American informal pantywaist, cupcake, pussy
    Australian/New Zealand informal sook
    South African informal moffie
    archaic poltroon
adjectivesissiest, sissierˈsɪsiˈsɪsi
informal
  • Feeble and cowardly.

    懦弱的;胆小的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If you're looking for a place to drink ale and not sissy drinks, come here.
    • It seems un-British, somehow, and we don't have cissy things like that.
    • He deemed it necessary to make statements that conveyed the basic message that saving bunnies was wimpy, sissy stuff.
    • They go out dancing and drive around on sissy motorbikes and see who can grow their hair the longest.
    • Well, I love to hear the throaty growl of the diesel engines as they warn vans and sissy pick-ups to get out of the way.
    • Most kids are brought up to regard cricket as a sissy game, most kids never even get to play.
    Synonyms
    cowardly, weak, feeble, spineless, effeminate, effete, limp-wristed, womanish, unmanly, soft
    informal wet, weedy, wimpish, wimpy, sissyish, queeny, sissified, swishy, yellow, yellow-bellied
    North American informal candy-assed

Derivatives

  • sissified

  • adjectiveˈsɪsɪfʌɪdˈsɪsəˌfaɪd
    informal
    • Effeminate, weak, or cowardly.

      a soft sissified manner and voice
      Example sentencesExamples
      • today's sissified, politically correct environment
      • High jump, already sissified by the use of an airbed to land on instead of the traditional sandpit, will be banned altogether.
      • By the close of the nineteenth century, a recognizably masculine ideal had emerged in contradistinction to effeminate or sissified males.
      • He has a soft sissified manner and voice.
  • sissiness

  • noun
    informal
    • His fans insisted that his naturalism and his underplaying refuted any residual sissiness that might be associated with acting.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is sissiness that frightens, enrages and offends the men.
      • I sat down with the only female recruiter in the office, in the hopes that she'd be less inclined to perceive my general sissiness than her male counterparts.
  • sissyish

  • adjective
    informal
    • Born in Ohio, he had an uneven boyhood, curiously dyslexic yet smart, sissyish in team sports but very competent athletically in individual competition.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • While he was fond of the theatre, he was wary of music as bordering on the sissyish.
      • Doting mothers adored the clothes, and the long flowing curls, but their sons did not like them at all, and found them uncomfortable and sissyish.
      • Their style was meant to symbolize tough, patriotic, working-class attitudes in contrast to the supposedly sissyish, pacifist, middle-class views of the hippies.
      • For him, all that dancing was a sissyish waste of calories.

Origin

Mid 19th century (in the sense 'sister'): from sis1 + -y2.

  • This was originally a pet form of sister (Old English) but soon came to be used in the sense ‘effeminate person, coward’.

Rhymes

Chrissie, Cissy, kissy, missy, prissy

Definition of sissy in US English:

sissy

(British cissy)
nounˈsɪsiˈsisē
informal
  • A person regarded as effeminate or cowardly.

    柔弱(或怯懦)的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tom thought singing was for sissies and kept his distance, but was gradually eased in.
    • If we're not macho thugs, we're ineffectual sissies.
    • No room for cissies in the Association, said they.
    • Don't be a sissy, go with him, his inner voice rebuked.
    • Luke grinned, and started singing, ‘Gerald is a sissy.’
    • Weapons are for sissies who can't fight with bare hands.
    • Dr Tiplady, the local physician, once found me running home in tears, and told the the boys who were chasing me that I was just a big sissy.
    • I screamed like a sissy when I was trapped with all those spiders.
    • Balsamic vinegar isn't just for sissies and wimps.
    • The only items on the menu would be chicken-fried steak and beer, and anyone who tried to order vegetables would be laughed at and called a sissy.
    Synonyms
    coward, weakling, milksop, milquetoast, namby-pamby, crybaby, baby
adjectiveˈsɪsiˈsisē
informal
  • Feeble and cowardly.

    懦弱的;胆小的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most kids are brought up to regard cricket as a sissy game, most kids never even get to play.
    • Well, I love to hear the throaty growl of the diesel engines as they warn vans and sissy pick-ups to get out of the way.
    • If you're looking for a place to drink ale and not sissy drinks, come here.
    • It seems un-British, somehow, and we don't have cissy things like that.
    • He deemed it necessary to make statements that conveyed the basic message that saving bunnies was wimpy, sissy stuff.
    • They go out dancing and drive around on sissy motorbikes and see who can grow their hair the longest.
    Synonyms
    cowardly, weak, feeble, spineless, effeminate, effete, limp-wristed, womanish, unmanly, soft

Origin

Mid 19th century (in the sense ‘sister’): from sis + -y.

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