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Definition 2024


jumped-up

jumped-up

English

Adjective

jumped-up (comparative more jumped-up, superlative most jumped-up)

  1. (idiomatic, pejorative) Describes a person who thinks or acts as if he/she is superior in some way that the speaker disagrees with. For instance, pretending to be of a higher class or having greater authority than he/she has in reality.
    2007, Nov 27. Scott Murray, writing in Guardian Unlimited. Stuttgart 3-2 Rangers
    • We're doomed if this wee jumped-up monkey gets Gordon Smith's blessing.
  2. that has risen from a lowly station or an inferior position: often with implication of conceit or arrogance
    • 1895, Punch, or the London Charivari, 24 August, 1895, "'Arry on Harry",
      You jumped-up, cheap, Coventry bagman, / silk-sampling, no doubt, is your biz
    • 1919, J.C. Snaith, The Undefeated, chapter XXXIV, pp. 233-234,
      Well, you can have all my share of democracy. Between you and me, Gert, it's mainly a name for a lot of jumped-up ignoramuses who have no idea of how little they do know.
    • 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, chapter II, p. 27,
      [] the faithful service he gave was pearl cast before mean, gutless, brainless, up-jumped swine []
    • 1982, Tom Stoppard, On the Razzle,
      [] I'm damned if I'm going to be harried and put off my stroke by the ridiculous self-importance of a jumped-up pastry-cook.
    • 2005 George R.R. Martin, A Feast for Crows
      "My good wife flatters them, to call them knights. They’re upjumped sellswords, with not a thimble of chivalry to be found amongst the four of them."
    • 2014 Brian Stavely, The Emperor's Blades,
      The man was an upjumped peasant with delusions of his own importance.

Alternative forms