cutesy-poo

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From cutesy +‎ -poo (forming affectionate, playful diminutives).

Adjective

cutesy-poo (comparative more cutesy-poo, superlative most cutesy-poo)

  1. (often derogatory) Overly or unpleasantly cute.

Noun

cutesy-poo (plural cutesy-poos)

  1. (often derogatory) A cutesy-poo person or thing.
    • 1976, Tom Robbins, Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, Boston, M.A.: Houghton Mifflin Company, →ISBN, page 160:
      He stood calmly, reducing the material existence of a French cigarette, and observed Jellybean and sisters with an expression of sarcastic amusement. "You pathetic little cutesy-poos," he seemed to say. "Do you actually suppose this exhibition of childish melodrama is advancing the cause of freedom?"
    • 1987 December 5, George Heymont, quoting Erie Mills, “Ego Intact”, in Opera News, volume 52, number 6, New York, N.Y.: Metropolitan Opera Guild, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 48:
      I even made it into a New York Times crossword puzzle, and people started saying, 'Erie Mills. Hot new item—isn't she the little cutesy-poo who sang in Candide? Let's get her!' But I want to convince people that I am capable of other roles too, that I'm a serious opera person.
    • 2002, K Spirito, Time Has a Way, San Jose, C.A. : Writer's Showcase, →ISBN, page 210:
      "Well, I'm not the same little cutesy-poo that Margaret Bascuino was," Margi railed. Her chest stuck out and her behind wriggled.

See also

References