phiz
English
Etymology
Clipping of physiognomy, late 17th c.
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪz
Noun
phiz (plural phizzes or phizes)
- (chiefly Britain, colloquial) The face.
- 1818, William Cowper, “Conversation”, in Poems, volume 1, page 163:
- The emphatic speaker dearly loves to oppose,
In contact inconvenient, nose to nose.
As if the gnomon on his neighbour's phiz,
Touched with the magnet had attracted his.
- 1831 June, “The Lord Advocate on Reform”, in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume 29, number 181, page 980:
- […] and whatever the feelings which now agitate our secret hearts, — you see we are resolved at least to put on a cheerful phiz, and not to die either of the dumps or the mumps, or any other of the dismals.
- 1885, Richard F. Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, volume 8:
- "As for thee, thou givest me good-morrow with thy one eye and thy lameness and thy ill-omened phiz and I become poor and bankrupt and hungry!"
- 1952, Bernard Malamud, The Natural:
- Flores stood in a corner with a melancholy expression on his phiz.
- 2017, Michael Butler, “Zizou is a rock. Zizou is an island”, in The Guardian:
- Sulley Muntari gets fresh and funky on social media disgrace Twitter after claims were made that he introduced his open palm to the phiz of a referee...
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