goody two shoes
See also: goody-two-shoes and goody two-shoes
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From goody (“goodwife, obsolete title of respect for a woman”) + two + shoes. Generally considered to have originated with the title character in The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes (1765), which indeed seems to be the source of its later use as a common noun with the present meaning. However, as a proper noun with implications of wealth rather than goodness, it is also found earlier, c. 1687, in the writings of Charles Cotton: “Why, what then; Goody Two-Shoes, what if it be? / Hold you, if you can, your tittle-tattle, quoth he.”
Noun
goody two shoes (plural goody two shoes)
- (derogatory) A goody-goody; a person who is exceptionally good and perhaps self-satisfied.
- 2006 June 18, William Safire, quoting Harry Reid, “Logoloco”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- […] When jabbed by ethicists, he at first asserted, "I'm not Goody Two-Shoes," before acknowledging a minor lapse.
- 2012 April 24, Patrick Wintour, “Jeremy Hunt: the 'goody two shoes' caught up in BSkyB scandal”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- [Jeremy Hunt] is charming, thoughtful and amusing in private, and one ally said he was "almost a goody two shoes".
- 2014 December 11, Stephen Holden, “Goody-Two-Shoes Loses His Footing”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- But the flaw at the heart of the movie is the decision of this goody-two-shoes to commit a series of robberies to support the family.
Synonyms
- (exceptionally good person): boy scout
Translations
goody-goody
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Further reading
- The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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