meanie

noun
/ˈmiːni/

Etymology

From mean + -ie.

  1. derived from *mey-
  2. derived from *meyno-
  3. derived from *meyn-
  4. inherited from *mainijaną
  5. inherited from *mainijan
  6. inherited from mǣnan
  7. inherited from menen
  8. suffixed as meanie — “mean + ie

Definitions

  1. A mean (unkind or miserly) person

    A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy.

    • Teacher kept me in after school again. What a meanie!
    • That meanie wouldn't even lend me the bus fare.
    • The indigent health-care bill died in the waning moments of the session, killed by Republican Representative Bill Ceverha of Dallas, a notorious meanie.
  2. A villain.

    • If you like your wrestling rough, we've had besides such old and revered roughies as Lisowski, Schmidt, Herman, etc., some great new meanies.
    • More energy for Bliss to pursue the depraved denizens of Gotham, the meanies who lurked in the shadows, who left the messes and spills he and his partner Ward were constantly cleaning up.
    • It starts out as a friendly yeast among the beneficial microbes in your intestines but morphs into a meanie if you indulge in what is called the Western diet—a diet high in sugar, red meat, white flour, and processed foods.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for meanie. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA