Frippery vs Wantonness - What's the difference?
frippery | wantonness | Related terms |
Ostentation, as in fancy clothing.
Useless things; trifles.
* 1892' April, (Frederick Law Olmsted), ''Report by F.L.O.'', quoted in '''2003 , , New York, N.Y.: (Crown Publishing Group), ISBN 978-0-609-60844-9, page 170:
* '>citation
(obsolete) Cast-off clothes.
* '>citation
(obsolete) The trade or traffic in old clothes.
(obsolete) The place where old clothes are sold.
* 1610 , , act 4 scene 1
Hence: secondhand finery; cheap and tawdry decoration; affected elegance.
(uncountable) The state or characteristic of being wanton; recklessness, especially as represented in lascivious or other excessive behavior.
*1897 , , Dracula , ch. 16,
*:The sweetness was turned to adamantine, heartless cruelty, and the purity to voluptuous wantonness .
(countable, dated) A particular wanton act.
*1882 , , History of New England during the Stuart Dynasty , Little Brown (Boston), v. 3, p. 366,
*:These were simply the wantonnesses of a dishonest man.
As nouns the difference between frippery and wantonness
is that frippery is ostentation, as in fancy clothing while wantonness is the state or characteristic of being wanton; recklessness, especially as represented in lascivious or other excessive behavior.frippery
English
Noun
- [Olmsted reiterated his insistence that in Chicago] simplicity and reserve will be practiced and petty effects and frippery avoided.
- O, ho, monster! we know what belongs to a frippery .
- Fond of gauze and French frippery . — .
- The gauzy frippery of a French translation. — .