Apedia

Slaphappy Confused Sense July Adjective Slap Hap Ee Hits Lot

Word slaphappy
Date July 29, 2011
Type adjective
Syllables SLAP-hap-ee
Etymology "Slaphappy" hits a lot of the same spots as "punch-drunk": when you suffer a blow to the head, you become confused and silly for a while. The "dazed and confused" sense of "slaphappy" first appeared in English in 1936, and by the following year it was being used to describe those who behave with such abandon it’s as though they’ve had the common sense knocked out of them. A 1937 article in the New York Herald Tribune called Ernest Hemingway, a writer known to have had an adventurous lifestyle, "the slaphappy litterateur." Often you will see the word spelled with a hyphen ("slap-happy"), but the closed compound is more common.
Examples The students were all a little slaphappy after pulling an all-nighter to finish their group project by morning.

"Leslie Nielsen, the straight-faced comic, was the master of the one-line joke. As the less-than-suave Lt. Frank Drebin or the slap-happy doctor in 'Airplane,' Nielsen used his droll wordplay to become one of the most memorable comics of all time." -- From a blog post by Melissa Bell on WashingonPost.com, November 29, 2010
Definition 1 : dazed and confused : punch-drunk
2 : buoyantly or recklessly carefree or foolish : happy-go-lucky

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Exterminate drive meaning latin word july verb ik-ster-muh-nayt

Previous card: Facsimile exact copy july noun office phrase meaning

Up to card list: Word of the Day