What is another word for prigs?

Pronunciation: [pɹˈɪɡz] (IPA)

The word "prigs" is often used to describe someone who is excessively formal or self-righteous. Synonyms for "prigs" include "snobs," "pedants," "smugsters," "pompous people," "holier-than-thou types," and "sticklers." These words all convey a sense of arrogance and overbearing self-importance. Other synonyms for "prigs" are "prudes," "stuffy people," "rigid individuals," and "insufferable bores." Each of these words describes someone who is uptight and humorless, with no ability to relax and let loose. Whether you're looking for a precise synonym or simply want to describe someone who takes themselves too seriously, these words all work well to capture the essence of a "prig".

What are the hypernyms for Prigs?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Prigs

  • There are those who strive to stamp with disrepute The luscious food, because it feeds the brute; In tropes of high-strain'd wit, while gaudy prigs Compare thy nursling man to pamper'd pigs; With sovereign scorn I treat the vulgar jest, Nor fear to share thy bounties with the beast.
    Joel Barlow
  • Those who, like the present writer, never had the privilege of meeting Sidgwick can infer from his writings, and still more from the characteristic philosophic merits of such pupils of his as McTaggart and Moore, how acute and painstaking a thinker and how inspiring a teacher he must have been. Yet he has grave defects as a writer which have certainly detracted from his fame. His style is heavy and involved, and he seldom allowed that strong sense of humour, which is said to have made him a delightful conversationalist, to relieve the uniform dull dignity of his writing. He incessantly refines, qualifies, raises objections, answers them, and then finds further objections to the answers. Each of these objections, rebuttals, rejoinders, and surrejoinders is in itself admirable, and does infinite credit to the acuteness and candour of the author. But the reader is apt to become impatient; to lose the thread of the argument: and to rise from his desk finding that he has read a great deal with constant admiration and now remembers little or nothing. The result is that Sidgwick probably has far less influence at present than he ought to have, and less than many writers, such as Bradley, who were as superior to him in literary style as he was to them in ethical and philosophical acumen. Even a thoroughly second-rate thinker like T. H. Green, by diffusing a grateful and comforting aroma of ethical "uplift", has probably made far more undergraduates into prigs than Sidgwick will ever make into philosophers.
    C. D. Broad
  • Heaven is the work of the best and kindest men and women. Hell is the work of prigs, pedants and professional truth-tellers. The world is an attempt to make the best of both.
    Samuel Butler (novelist)
  • Philistine – a word which I understand properly to denote indifference to the higher intellectual interests. The word may also be defined, however, as the name applied by prigs to the rest of their species.
    Leslie Stephen

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