hissy fit
English
editEtymology
editClipping of histrionics.
Pronunciation
editNoun
edithissy fit (plural hissy fits)
- (informal) A childish display of anger or frustration; an overly dramatic tantrum.
- 1996 May 13, David E. Thigpen, “If You Could Hear Her Now”, in Time:
- Viewers were aghast. . . . As co-host Regis Philbin flinched, Gifford launched into a teary, it's-not-my-fault, TV hissy fit: "You can say I'm ugly, you can say I'm not talented, but when you say I don't care about children, how dare you!"
- 2006, Stephen Weeks, The White Horses:
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Stephen Weeks to this entry?)