English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Middle English tartelet, from Old French tartelette; equivalent to tart +‎ -let.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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tartlet (plural tartlets)

  1. A small tart (pastry).
    • 1969, The South African Sugar Journal, volume 53, page 51:
      Place the cream in a piping bag with a fairly large star pipe attached, fill each tartlet with a twirl of cream and top with a strawberry.
  2. (derogatory, slang) A promiscuous young woman.
    • 1992, Stephen Coonts, The Cannibal Queen: A Flight Into the Heart of America[1], Open Road Integrated Media, published 2010, →ISBN:
      The only excitement I had was watching a tartlet in a teeny-weeny bikini that barely contained her truly mammoth assets light a cigarette and suck on it with puckered, painted, Lolita lips.
    • 2010, Jo Beverley, Emily and the Dark Angel[2], Signet Eclipse, published 2010, →ISBN:
      "She's a whore. A tartlet. Junia, he bought her for a hundred and fifty guineas, and then had the nerve to ask me to marry him!"
    • 2010, Pastor Shirley, S.E.C.R.E.T.S. of the First Ladies, Dog Ear Publishing, published 2010, →ISBN, page 77:
      She hated that a large chunk of Jerry's income supported his little tartlets instead of being directed into their household as it should have been..
    • 2011, A. K. Wrox, Arrabella Candellarbra & The Questy Thing to End All Questy Things[3], Clan Destine Press, published 2011, →ISBN:
      'Be gone tartlets! Your feminine charms hold no power over me,' he said, []
    • 2012 July 29, Sarah Nicole Prickett, “Kristen Stewart should not have apologized, and here's why”, in The Globe and Mail:
      I have yet to see a Hollywood tartlet apologize for weighing 95 pounds, or for playing dumb to stay popular, or for always being the sidekick when there's action.

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