sad sack
See also: sadsack
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
US 1920s. Popularized by Sad Sack, a cartoon character and eponymous comic strip published originally June 1942 in Yank, the Army Weekly, a US Army publication for soldiers, and later syndicated in the US 1940s and 1950s. Presumably from vulgar “sad sack of shit” as cartoonist Sgt. George Baker said he took it from a “longer phrase, of a derogatory nature”. The term originally referred to a well-meaning but inept soldier.[1]
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
sad sack (plural sad sacks) (chiefly US)
- An incompetent or inept person.
- 2007 June 3, Cara Buckley, William K. Rashbaum, “4 Men Accused of Plot to Blow Up Kennedy Airport Terminals and Fuel Lines”, in New York Times, retrieved 5 April 2015:
- One law enforcement official played down Mr. Defreitas’s ability to carry out an attack, calling him “a sad sack” and “not a Grade A terrorist.”
- A perennial failure or victim of misfortune.
- 2010 July 26, Michiko Kakutani, “Love Found Amid Ruins of Empire”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- “Super Sad” takes as its Romeo and Juliet, its Tristan and Iseult, a middle-aged sad sack named Lenny Abramov and a much younger beauty named Eunice Park.
- 2013 April 27, “Movie capsules: Arthur Newman”, in Boston Globe, retrieved 5 April 2015:
- Weary of his drab life with its nowhere job, failed marriage, boring girlfriend, and estranged teenage son, a middle-aged sad sack fakes his death, changes his identity, and hits the road.
- 2014 March 29, Zach Schonfeld, “Film Review: Jason Schwartzman Is Charmingly Inept in 7 Chinese Brothers”, in Newsweek, retrieved 5 April 2015:
- We meet him as he's on his way out, taking the news with equal parts tantrum and sad-sack acceptance.
See also
References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “sad”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Further reading
- “sad sack”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
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