Difference between revisions of "Milquetoast"

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'''Milquetoast''' refers to an unassertive and spineless person who can be easily intimidated or dominated.
 
'''Milquetoast''' refers to an unassertive and spineless person who can be easily intimidated or dominated.
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The term comes from a character in Harold T. Webster's 1924-1953 ''New York Herald Tribune'' comic strip ''The Timid Soul''.  The character's name was Caspar Milquetoast, and Webster described him as “the man who speaks softly and gets hit with a big stick”.<ref>World Wide Words, ''MILQUETOAST'', by Michael Quinion,  1 Jun 2002 [http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-mil1.htm]</ref>
  
 
[[Liberals]] exploit and capitalize on the existence of milquetoast personalities in schools, corporations and other institutions in order to push their agenda.
 
[[Liberals]] exploit and capitalize on the existence of milquetoast personalities in schools, corporations and other institutions in order to push their agenda.
  
 
[[Category:Liberals]][[Category:Debate]][[Category:Rhetoric]]
 
[[Category:Liberals]][[Category:Debate]][[Category:Rhetoric]]

Revision as of 02:29, March 16, 2009

Milquetoast refers to an unassertive and spineless person who can be easily intimidated or dominated.

The term comes from a character in Harold T. Webster's 1924-1953 New York Herald Tribune comic strip The Timid Soul. The character's name was Caspar Milquetoast, and Webster described him as “the man who speaks softly and gets hit with a big stick”.[1]

Liberals exploit and capitalize on the existence of milquetoast personalities in schools, corporations and other institutions in order to push their agenda.
  1. World Wide Words, MILQUETOAST, by Michael Quinion, 1 Jun 2002 [1]