chintzy

Etymology 1

From chintz + -y.

adj

  1. Of or decorated with chintz.
    This time she showed him into her living room instead of the kitchen. It was a little chintzier than it would have been if she'd actually owned the place, but he seemed to like it and sank comfortably into a loose-covered, old-fashioned, square-cornered sofa. 1995, David Ambrose, chapter 66, in Mother of God, London: Macmillan Publishers
    Wanting to get out of the house, he descended toward the large living room with its chintzy curtains and stuffy lamps and pictures. His least favorite room. 2003, Frank Corsaro, “Part Seven”, in Kunma, New York, N.Y.: Forge
    My parents had a dormer and two impossibly small twin beds with the world's chintziest chest between them. 2014, Gerry House, Country Music Broke My Brain: A Behind-the-Microphone Peek at Nashville's Famous and Fabulous Stars, Dallas, Tx.: BenBella Books, page 11
    Well—there always were for instance chintzy flower patterns [for curtains] and imitation Turkey or Persian rugs. They have none of that gate-crashing quality[.] They keep in their place as a quiet accompaniment to your lives. I don't think anybody has ever really got tired of them. Only of course they are not very [lively] either. And while you certainly don't want the jazzy sort of [liveliness] every day—I said that before—you may want something else which the chintzy curtains or the Oriental rug don't give you. 2014, Nikolaus Pevsner, “Soft Furnishings—Carpets, Curtains and Upholstery”, in Stephen Games, editor, Pevsner: The Complete Broadcast Talks: Architecture and Art on Radio and Television, 1945–1977, Farnham, Surrey, Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate Publishing, page 36
  2. (figurative) Tastelessly showy; cheap, gaudy, or tacky.
    "Tea!" she said in a tiny voice. / "Wake up! It's nearly five." / Oh! Chintzy, chintzy cheeriness, / Half dead and half alive. 1931, John Betjeman, “Death in Leamington”, in Earl of Birkenhead [Frederick Winston Furneaux Smith, 2nd Earl of Birkenhead], compiler, John Betjeman's Collected Poems, London: John Murray, published 1958, →OCLC
    Now even [Fred] Silverman was grim. "It looks chintzy," he said, "even with all the money we're spending." 10 September 1971, Thomas Thompson, “The Crapshoot for Half a Billion: Fred Silverman Rolls the Dice for CBS”, in Life, volume 71, number 11, Chicago, Ill.: Time Inc., →OCLC, page 55
    Willington had seen disco for what it was – the great Muzaking of rock and roll via a chintzy chorus, chintzy rotating mirror balls, and chintzy Arthur Murray twirling. 1984, Peter LaSalle, chapter 13, in Strange Sunlight:[…], Austin, Tex.: Texas Monthly Press, page 115
    I don't know, maybe they loved each other at one time, but it was also quite possible that she only married him because she wanted to live in that chintzy house of hers, and wear her chintzy rings, and lunch with her chintzy friends at the chintzy fucking country club. 2002, Tiffanie DeBartolo, chapter 47, in God Shaped Hole: A Novel, Naperville, Ill.: Sourcebooks Landmark, page 282
    When the proliferation of turkeys in the theaters began to sap her energy […], and there are only so many observations to be made about how easily the young audiences are tumbling for chintzier and chintzier pictures, she searches for a new style: brisker, more shorthand. 2015, Steve Vineberg, “Critical Fervor”, in Wayne Stengel, editor, Talking about Pauline Kael: Critics, Filmmakers, and Scholars Remember an Icon (Film and History), Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, page 142

Etymology 2

From earlier chinchy, from Middle English chynchy (“miserly, stingy”), from Middle English chinche (“stingy, miserly; miser”) + -y.

adj

  1. (figurative) Excessively reluctant to spend; miserly, stingy.
    Is there a place for being prudent, frugal, and thrifty with the one we love in marriage? Sure. But only when careful ways are outweighed by generosity to overflowing. […] Think of a time when you were being a bit more chintzy with your partner than you needed to be. What was the result and was it worth it? 2000, Les Parrott, Leslie Parrott, “A Penny Saved is Sometimes Chintzy”, in Meditations on Proverbs for Couples, Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan Publishing House, page 63
    They were sitting at the kitchen table. There was a fizzy pop as her father opened a can of ginger ale for Mr. Cooper. Store brand, of course. Lately everything was generic. Not that it mattered to any of them, only Ruth, who said it was just the chintziest way to live. 2011, Mary McGarry Morris, chapter 4, in Light from a Distant Star: A Novel, New York, N.Y.: Crown Publishers, page 34
    "But you don't charge a buddy a fee for finding him a job. That's chintzy, man! Chintzy!" / "You won't think it's so chintzy when five bucks multiply each day by the number of heads hauled. We'll split it fifty-fifty." 11 February 2011, Raymond C. Archuleta, Manuel Vic Villalpando, chapter 7, in The Illicit American: A True Story about the Smuggling of Human Cargo, 2nd edition, Bloomington, Ind.: AuthorHouse, page 110

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