Cranky Words and Cool Words
Lecture 22
T
he great Mark Twain chronicled human hypocrisy and foibles with
wit and sarcasm. He is known for such curmudgeonly quotes as “The
more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.” Although Twain
was known for his sarcasm, there was always an undercurrent of warmth
and humanity in his writing. However, in our own lives, we often deal with
crabby people who don’t share Twain’s tempering warmth. We also deal
with people on the opposite end of the emotional spectrum—the reserved
and dispassionate. In this lecture, we’ll look at a host of wonderful words to
use for both these types of people—the cranky and the cool.
Splenetic (adjective)
Bad-tempered, irritable, or spiteful.
z In general, a splenetic person is full of anger. Think of the professor
who’s so prickly that you’re afraid to ask a question in class for fear
RIUHFHLYLQJDVDUFDVWLFUHVSRQVHRUWKHERVV\RX¶YHKDGZKRÀLHV
into a rage at the slightest provocation. Put simply, splenetic people
are ill-tempered cranks.
z The word splenetic is actually related to spleen, which was considered
the seat of moroseness and bad temper in medieval physiology.
z English has a wide variety of synonyms for splenetic, including
bristly, SULFNO\, crabby, FUDQN\, crotchety, FDQWDQNHURXV, irascible
(easily provoked), testy (irritated by small annoyances), and
dyspeptic (gloomy, sullen, and irritable).
Fractious (adjective)
Unruly; hard to manage; rebellious.