Word
Of
The
Day
frowsy
frowsy \FROW-zee\
adjective
Something described as frowsy has a messy or dirty appearance.
// The lamp, discovered in a neglected corner of a
frowsy antique store, turned out to be quite valuable.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Footage from his early shows is sublime. In one, models with
frowsy hair totter along the catwalk in clogs, clutching—for reasons not explained—dead mackerel.” — Jess Cartner-Morley,
The Guardian (London), 4 Mar. 2024
Did you know?
Despite its meanings suggesting neglect and inattention,
frowsy has been kept in steady rotation by English users since the late 1600s. The word (which is also spelled
frowzy and has enjoyed other variants over the centuries) first wafted into the language in an
olfactory sense describing that which smells
fusty and
musty—an old factory, perhaps, or “corrupt air from animal substance,” which Benjamin Franklin described as “frouzy” in a 1773 letter.
Frowsy later gained an additional sense describing the appearance of something (or someone) disheveled or unkempt. Charles Dickens was a big fan of this usage, writing of “frowzy fields, and cowhouses” in
Dombey and Son and “a frowzy fringe” of hair hanging about someone’s ears in
The Old Curiosity Shop. Both senses are still in use today.