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Synonyms

priggish

American  
[prig-ish] / ˈprɪg ɪʃ /

adjective

  1. fussy about trivialities or propriety, especially in a self-righteous or irritating manner.

    At the beginning of the book, Eustace is an unpleasant, unlikable, and priggish character.

    He never softened his message to please genteel tastes or priggish scruples.


Other Word Forms

  • priggishly adverb
  • priggishness noun
  • unpriggish adjective

Etymology

Origin of priggish

prig 1 ( def. ) + -ish 1

Explanation

Priggish people are snobby and self-righteous. An overly prim and proper movie character who's always telling other people what they should do is priggish. If you offer your opinion on how your friends should live their lives, and especially if you're very uptight and snooty, people will think you're priggish. The adjective priggish comes from the eighteenth century prig, "precise in speech and manners," which was also used to mean "religiously devout." Earlier, a prig was "a petty thief."

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing priggish

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Woolf, like several other characters in “Run,” is based on a real person; Cocker-Norris, whom Oyelowo renders with an amusingly priggish persnickety-ness, is not.

From Washington Post • Sep. 13, 2022

He’s not a priggish bootstrapper but a plucky bon vivant who does his work with a smile, always “on the alert for business.”

From New York Times • Apr. 5, 2022

Once criticized for a sense of rectitude so priggish it began to appear perverse, Starr course-corrected by defending Jeffrey Epstein and then Donald Trump.

From Slate • Aug. 15, 2021

Throughout the pandemic, Clapton has joined in criticism of the COVID-19 lockdown, as if governments were just 1960s priggish parents grounding kids for smoking grass.

From Los Angeles Times • Jul. 23, 2021

Forgetting that he’d ever been way behind the fashion curve, he was appalled, in some priggish, nouveau riche kind of way, that certain passengers appeared in the dining room in slacks and sneakers.

From "Endgame" by Frank Brady