Word
Of
The
Day
kibitzer
kibitzer \KIB-it-ser\
noun
A kibitzer is someone who watches other people and makes unwanted comments about what they are doing.
// It wasn't long after they bought their house that the couple heard from neighborhood
kibitzers offering tips on landscaping and remodeling.
See the entry >
Examples:
"During the chess games, the telegraph operators occasionally asked each other how many people were in the room. At times, a dozen
kibitzers looked on. At others, only the rotating cast of chess players and telegraph operators was present." — Greg Uyeno,
IEEE Spectrum, 11 Dec. 2025
Did you know?
The Yiddish language has given English some particularly piquant terms over the years, and
kibitzer (or
kibbitzer) is one such word.
Kibitzer came into English—by way of the Yiddish
kibitser—from the German word
kiebitzen, meaning "to look on (at a card game)." (Like its ancestor,
kibitzer was originally, and sometimes still is, applied to vocal observers of cards as well as other games.) Although
kibitzer usually implies the imparting of unwanted advice, there is a respectable body of evidence for a kibitzer as a person simply making comments or even just shooting the breeze.