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Namby-pamby   /nˈæmbipˈæmbi/   Listen
Namby-pamby

noun
1.
An insipid weakling who is foolishly sentimental.
adjective
1.
Weak in willpower, courage or vitality.  Synonyms: gutless, spineless, wishy-washy.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Namby-pamby" Quotes from Famous Books



... if I remember rightly, when I became worried, not over my heavenly estate now, but my earthly one. I must have a career, of course. No namby-pamby everyday living of dishes and dusting and meals and babies for me. It was all very well, of course, for some people. Such things had to be. But ...
— Mary Marie • Eleanor H. Porter

... Comedie de la Mort. The little book came out, inspired by "all the poetasters." Christopher North wrote, four years later, in Blackwood's Magazine, a tardy review. He styled it "an ingeniously absurd poem, with an ingeniously absurd title, written in a strange, namby-pamby sort of style, between the weakest of Shelley and the strongest of Barry Cornwall." The book "fell dead from the Press," far more dead than "Omar Khayyam." Nay, misfortune pursued it, Miss Stoddart kindly informs me, and it was doomed to the flames. ...
— Adventures among Books • Andrew Lang

... unbearable, and depositing some small unburnt portion of his remains fathoms deep below the soil in an old burying ground near Kanturk. And there had been a good earl, as is always the case with such families; but even his virtues, according to tradition, had been of a useless namby-pamby sort. He had walked to the shrine of St. Finbar, up in the little island of the Gougane Barra, with unboiled peas in his shoes; had forgiven his tenants five years' rent all round, and never drank wine or washed himself after the death of his ...
— Castle Richmond • Anthony Trollope

... wish her all good things. I enclose you as you see a little drawing of a Suffolk farm house close here: copied from a sketch of poor Mr. Nursey. If you think it worth giving to Mary Allen, do: it seems, and perhaps is, very namby-pamby to send this: but she and I used to talk of drawings together: and this will let her know that I go on just the same as I did eight years ago. N.B. It is not intended ...
— Letters of Edward FitzGerald - in two volumes, Vol. 1 • Edward FitzGerald

... we have a piece of namby-pamby "to the Small Celandine," which we should almost have taken for a professed imitation of one of Mr. ...
— Famous Reviews • Editor: R. Brimley Johnson


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