Society & Culture0 min ago
Cheaky
13 Answers
An american friend says they dont have this word in the states, is there anything similar to it that they say other than 'rude'?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you would probably say that someone has the guts or the nerve to say or do something. i looked it up, and the synonims would be impudent, insolent, saucy, impertinent, all of which have a formal tone.
hootspah never heard, neither is it in. my Webster's. i just see another word in the next page, sassy. this one is used and not as formal.
I think you mean chutzpah, football. It's a Yiddish word (the classic definition is of a man who kills his parents and asks for mercy from the court as he's an orphan) and is a bit stronger then cheek (and it's a noun rather than an adjective). I don't think rude is quite the same as cheeky either; worder's sassy looks best to me.
I think using "cute" to mean "cheeky" is a regional thing - I have heard it used that way in the US but wouldn't use it that way myself.
"Chutzpah" USED to be only used by Jewish people; now I hear non-Jews use it too.
Alej, for use with "little boy", I think "bratty" or "obnoxious" would come closest.
As a Yank, I'll agreed with my countrymen's suggestions of fresh as adjective, smart-aleck as noun (He's a smart-aleck)
Smart-aleck is related to wiseacre.
Sassy sounds a little too admiring (there's a magazine for teen girls with that name, and an old shampoo brand I think, something smart-n-sassy), but a parent would certainly say "Don't you sass me!" or "Don't get smart with me!"
Chutzpah is, to gentiles, "nerves" or "B*lls"