waggish

狡黠的

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

2025-12-12

2 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 12, 2025 is: waggish • WAG-ish  • adjective Waggish describes someone who is silly and playful, and especially someone who displays a mischievous sense of humor. The word can also describe things that such a person might do or possess. // He had a waggish disposition that could irk adults but typically delighted children. // She denied the prank but did so with a waggish smirk that didn't match her disavowal. See the entry > Examples: “[Patricia] Lockwood began her writing life quietly, as a poet. She found her first major audience on Twitter, posting self-proclaimed ‘absurdities’ ... that quickly came to define the medium’s zany, waggish ethos ...” — Alexandra Schwartz, The New Yorker, 25 Aug. 2025 Did you know? One who is waggish acts like a wag. What, then, is a wag? It has nothing to do with a dog’s tail; in this case a wag is a clever person prone to joking. Though light-hearted in its use and meaning, the probable source of this particular wag is grim: it is thought to be short for waghalter, an obsolete English word that translates as gallows bird, a gallows bird being someone thought to be deserving of hanging (wag being the familiar wag having to do with movement, and halter referring to a noose). Despite its gloomy origins, waggish is now often associated with humor and playfulness—a wag is a joker, and waggery is merriment or practical joking. Waggish can describe the prank itself as well as the prankster type; the class clown might be said to have a “waggish disposition” or be prone to “waggish antics.”
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • It's the Word of the Day podcast for December 12th.

  • Today's word is waggish, spelled W-A-G-G-I-S-H.

  • Waggish is an adjective.

  • It describes someone who is silly and playful,

  • and especially someone who displays a mischievous sense of humor.

  • The word can also describe things that such a person might do or possess.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker by Alexandra Schwartz.

  • Patricia Lockwood began her writing life quietly as a poet.

  • She found her first major audience on Twitter posting self-proclaimed absurdities that quickly came to define the medium's zany,

  • waggish ethos.

  • One who is waggish acts like a wag.

  • What then is a wag?

  • It has nothing to do with a dog's tail.

  • In this case, a wag is a clever person prone to joking.

  • Though lighthearted in its use and meaning, the probable source of this particular wag is grim.

  • It is thought to be short for waghalter, an obsolete English word that translates as gallows bird,

  • a gallows bird being someone thought to be deserving of hanging.

  • wag being the familiar wag having to do with movement, and halter referring to a noose.

  • Despite its gloomy origins, waggish is now often associated with humor and playfulness.

  • A wag is a joker, and waggery is merriment or practical joking.