warm fuzzy
English
Etymology
The term comes from Claude Steiner's children's story The Warm Fuzzy Tale.
Noun
warm fuzzy (plural warm fuzzies)
- (informal) A good impression; a feeling of comfort, happiness or trust.
- I suppose they are a reputable business, but I didn't get a warm fuzzy from their salesman.
- Antonym: cold prickly
- 2005, Michelle Graham, “The Lie We Buy: Beauty and Culture”, in Wanting to Be Her: Body Image Secrets Victoria Won’t Tell You, Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, →ISBN, page 11:
- Nostalgia. Walks down memory lane fill me with warm fuzzies—right up there with a warm bubble bath and a good cup of café mocha.
- (informal, chiefly in the plural, often derogatory) A sense of accomplishment after performing an act.
- John picks up litter in our neighborhood because it gives him warm fuzzies.
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