Sourpuss

/ˈsaʊərpʌs/ noun

Definition

A person who is habitually grumpy, bad-tempered, or unpleasant in disposition.

Etymology

Combines 'sour' (from Old English sur, meaning sharp or acidic in taste) with 'puss' (a colloquial term for face, possibly from Irish pus). The compound emerged in American English in the early 1900s to describe someone whose facial expression seems perpetually sour or displeased.

Kelly Says

Sourpuss is one of those wonderfully descriptive words where the meaning is hidden in plain sight—if someone's attitude is 'sour' and you can see it on their 'puss' (face), you've got a sourpuss! It's a great example of how English speakers create vivid character descriptions by combining simple words.

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Pejorative diminutive applied disproportionately to women who expressed anger, dissatisfaction, or refused to perform emotional labor; framed women's justified frustration as personality flaw.

Inclusive Usage

Avoid; describe specific behavior ('expressed frustration', 'declined to participate') rather than labeling personality with gendered contempt.

Inclusive Alternatives

["expressed frustration","declined","displeased","showed displeasure"]

Empowerment Note

Women's anger and refusal to smile were historically pathologized; men with identical expressions were considered 'serious' or 'discerning'.

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