milquetoast

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(mĭlk'tōst') pronunciation
n.
One who has a meek, timid, unassertive nature.

[After Caspar Milquetoast, a comic-strip character created by Harold Tucker Webster (1885-1952).]

milquetoasty milque'toast'y adj.

WORD HISTORY   An indication of the effect on the English language of popular culture is the adoption of names from the comic strips as English words. Casper Milquetoast, created by Harold Webster in 1924, was a timid and retiring man named for a timid food. The first instance of milquetoast as a common noun is found in the mid-1930s. Milquetoast thus joins the ranks of other such words, including sad sack, from a blundering army private invented by George Baker in 1942, and Wimpy, from J. Wellington Wimpy in the Popeye comic strip, which became a trade name for a hamburger. If we look to a related form of popular culture, the animated cartoon, we must of course acknowledge Mickey Mouse, which has become a slang term for something that is easy, insignificant, small-time, worthless, or petty.


Roget's Thesaurus:

milquetoast

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noun

    A person who behaves in a childish, weak, or spoiled way: baby, milksop, mollycoddle, weakling. Idioms: mama'sboygirl. See youth/age/maturity.

Word Tutor:

milquetoast

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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - A timid man or boy considered childish or unassertive.

Tutor's tip: With a character as weak as soggy "milk toast" (buttered toast served in hot milk), the sales director had no choice but to fire the "milquetoast" (meek, timid person).

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Mentioned in

It's Not Cricket (1937 Comedy Film)
I Like Your Nerve (1931 Comedy Film)
Magic Spectacles (1961 Fantasy Film)
Bottoms Up (1987 Adult Film)