Word
Of
The
Day
jaundiced
jaundiced \JAWN-dist\
adjective
Jaundiced means “showing or influenced by feelings of distrust, distaste, or hostility.” Someone described as jaundiced, or as possessing jaundiced opinions or views, is typically understood to feel that way because of negative past experiences.
// She developed a
jaundiced view of politics after years of chairing her local school board committee and witnessing all kinds of petty shenanigans.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Now, I’m not accusing the mayor of anything. I’m saying that all of these actions were highly inappropriate for an elected official. I voted for her, but will forevermore look at her actions with a
jaundiced eye.” — Eric Rinehimer,
The Retrospect (Collingswood, New Jersey), 23 Jan. 2026
Did you know?
Cast not a jaundiced eye on the word
jaundiced—and by that we mean this: don’t dislike or distrust
jaundiced because of past experiences with the word or with others like it.
Jaundiced is handy for describing the grumps among us who tend toward envy, aversion, or hostility, and who doesn’t know a few of those? This useful 17th century adjective comes from an also-useful 14th century noun
jaundice that still refers to a medical condition in which excess bile pigments in the bloodstream and body tissues cause a person’s skin to turn yellow. The connection between the physical condition and the bad attitude lies in the
physiological theory of the bodily humors, which holds that a hostile, irritable temperament is caused by excess yellow bile in one’s body.