WCOREW Word

Cantankerous


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Came first in group 159 in round 1 with 375 votes

beat Angular on 65 votes
beat Stool on 42 votes
beat Buff on 40 votes


Came first in group 40 in round 2 with 463 votes

beat Filch on 173 votes
beat Ghastly on 123 votes
beat Stroll on 49 votes


Won in group 20 in round 3 with 602 votes

beat Quandary on 271 votes


Won in group 10 in round 4 with 801 votes

beat Fetlock on 398 votes


Won in group 5 in round 5 with 786 votes

beat Paraphernalia on 777 votes


Won in group 3 in round 6 with 749 votes

beat Sprocket on 524 votes


Lost in group 2 in round 7 with 615 votes

beaten by Shenanigans on 998 votes



English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Perhaps derived from earlier contenkerous, from contentious + rancorous.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /kænˈtæŋkəɹəs/, /kənˈtæŋkəɹəs/
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Adjective[edit]

cantankerous (comparative more cantankerous, superlative most cantankerous)

  1. Given to or marked by an ill-tempered, quarrelsome nature; ill-tempered, cranky, crabby.
    • 1839, “The youth of Julia Howard”, in Fraser's magazine for town and country, volume 20, page 618:
      "She is a cantankerous old maid," added another, whom I recognised, by his voice, as a man whose attentions I had put a determined check to not six weeks before: "she is a cantankerous old maid, fretting and snarling over the loss of her beauty."
    • 1978 December 9, Pat M. Kuras, “A Splice of Lesbian Life”, in Gay Community News, volume 6, number 20, page 11:
      Murphy's Law never proved itself more accurate than at the Nov. 18 film benefit for Persephone Press. With problems ranging from a cantankerous projector to blown fuses, the presentations of Jan Oxenberg's films were blurred, disrupted and played with lapses in their soundtracks.
    • 1998, Pauline Chazan, The Moral Self, page 80:
      By contrast, cantankerous and churlish people are contemptuously independent of others’ opinions, not caring enough about others and their views.
    • 2007, Linda Francis Lee, The Devil in the Junior League, page 44:
      Nina was thrilled, muttering her cantankerous joy that I was getting out of the house.
    • 2010, Clare Vanderpool, Moon Over Manifest, page 169:
      Unfortunately, as Great-Aunt Bert could be a bit cantankerous, they were having to be creative.

Usage notes[edit]

Note: cantankerous is generally used to describe an unpleasant elderly person in a slightly pejorative manner. However, the term can be used to people in general, livestock, and machinery as well.

Synonyms[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

Translations[edit]