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Origin of toffee-nosed?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In a 1943 dictionary of Services' slang, the word was listed as being especially used by WAAFs, members of the women's branch of the RAF.
The idea behind it is that anyone who was toffee-nosed was someone who held her nose in the air in an attempt to keep it away from her mouth...the place where toffee would go. We find the same concept in the phrase looking down your nose at people. Both clearly suggest that the person considers herself a cut above her colleagues.
The idea behind it is that anyone who was toffee-nosed was someone who held her nose in the air in an attempt to keep it away from her mouth...the place where toffee would go. We find the same concept in the phrase looking down your nose at people. Both clearly suggest that the person considers herself a cut above her colleagues.
'Toff' in the C19 meant " a well-dressed or smart person; someone of wealth or social standing" according to the O.E.D., which says that, perhaps, the word is a variant of tuft. 'Tuft' once specifically referred to the gold tassle on the caps of aristocrats at Oxford University.
Toffy sounds like an adjective formed from 'toff' and meaning 'like or pertaining to a toff'. Toffee, the noun, was once also spelt 'toffy' It seems plausible that we have confused 'toffee' the noun for the confectionery, with 'toffy', an adjective now forgotten.
'To have one's nose in the air' is a common expression for 'to act as though superior to others'. We might say that a person doing so was 'snooty' . In the C19,'snoot' was a colloquial word for a person's nose. The nose seems to 'feature' in such words and sayings :)
Toffy sounds like an adjective formed from 'toff' and meaning 'like or pertaining to a toff'. Toffee, the noun, was once also spelt 'toffy' It seems plausible that we have confused 'toffee' the noun for the confectionery, with 'toffy', an adjective now forgotten.
'To have one's nose in the air' is a common expression for 'to act as though superior to others'. We might say that a person doing so was 'snooty' . In the C19,'snoot' was a colloquial word for a person's nose. The nose seems to 'feature' in such words and sayings :)
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