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Wiktionary英語版での「unschoolmarmish」の意味 |
unschoolmarmish
語源
From un- + schoolmarmish.
形容詞
unschoolmarmish (comparative more unschoolmarmish, superlative most unschoolmarmish)
- Not schoolmarmish.
- 1878 July 27, “A Marriage that Didn’t Come Off”, in The Iola Register, volume XII, number 31, Iola, Kan., front page, column 6:
- A young man on Minnesota Street and one of the lady teachers in one of the public schools not far from Cass Avenue, having concluded that a consolidation of their joys and sorrows would lead to their mutual advantage, resolved that upon the 17th day of July, 1878, at 8 o’clock in the evening, they would be joined in holy wedlock. […] The young man didn’t know a license was necessary. He begged the minister to go on. The minister respected the majesty of the law and refused. The bride burst into very un[-]school-marmish tears; she sobbed and prayed the hard-hearted clergyman to look upon that wedding outfit and complete the ceremony.
- 1938 April 29, John Brophy, “Books of the Day: New Fiction: Three Irish Novels”, in The Daily Telegraph and Morning Post, number 25,868 Daily Telegraph / 51,739 Morning Post, London, section “Miss Kate O’Brien”, page 22:
- He is attracted to an unschoolmarmish schoolmistress, but cannot settle down to Ireland.
- 1939, Anecho: The Yearly Publication of the Provincial Normal School, Victoria, B.C., page 6:
- 1946 December 2, Celestine Sibley, “Relentless Approach Of Christmas Things”, in The Atlanta Constitution, volume LXXIX, number 170, Atlanta, Ga., page 7:
- We tiptoed backstage in search of our second grader and found Mrs. Brown, who handles second graders with humor and affection, leaning against a packing case muffling a hearty case of un[-]school-marmish hysterics.
- 1962 April 15, “Reply from a Headmistress”, in The Sun-Herald, Sydney, N.S.W., page 106:
- Attractive Miss Dawn Mackay, formerly a dancing teacher, who received the controversial appointment as headmistress at Heathfield, Britain’s top girls’ school, has finally spoken out in reply to her critics. […] A soft-voiced, well-groomed decidedly unschoolmarmish Scot, the 32-year-old willow-slim Miss Mackay admits she, too, thought the idea of her appointment a little odd at first.
- 1962 December 11, The Bakersfield Californian, volume 76, number 114, Bakersfield, Calif., page 2, column 1:
- 1965, Clifton Fadiman, “Commentary”, in Fifty Years: Being a Retrospective Collection of Novels, Novellas, Tales, Drama, Poetry, and Reportage and Essays (Whether Literary, Musical, Contemplative, Historical, Biographical, Argumentative, または Gastronomical); All Drawn from Volumes Issued during the Last Half-Century by Alfred and Blanche Knopf Over This Sign and Device, New York, N.Y.: Alfred A. Knopf, section “Reportage and Essays”, page 717:
- H. L. Mencken (1880–1956)—let us say it baldly—was not only one of the greatest journalists who ever lived but also one of the best writers of American prose of his time and just conceivably in our whole history. The judgment can stand only if our canons are non-academic. Mencken was impolite, noisy, and unschoolmarmish. He used exaggeration, vituperation, catch-as-catch-can epithets, slang, facetious Teutonisms, facetious Latinisms, sesquipedalian jocularity. Fowler would have execrated him. Any professor would.
- 1990 May 11, Edwin M. Yoder Jr., “Protest terribly patronizing”, in The State, 99th year, number 131, Columbia, S.C., page 19-A, column 1:
- When she was barely 20, my mother collected her college degree and, remarkably in the South of the early 1920s, moved hundreds of miles to become a schoolmarm (a very lively かつ un-schoolmarmish one I am sure) in North Carolina.
- 1994, Maria von Wedemeyer; Ruth-Alice von Bismarck and Ulrich Kabitz, editors; John Brownjohn, transl., Love Letters from Cell 92: Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Maria Von Wedemeyer, 1943-1945, HarperCollinsPublishers, →ISBN, page 92:
- Little Gottfried is waving a building brick under my nose and saying, ‘Aunt Miesenmaus, Goffi write to Uncle Dietrich too!’ – so I keep having to break off and be auntishly unschoolmarmish. I don’t think any aunt has ever been so besotted with her nephew. I wish I could bring him to see you some time.
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tinker's damn
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