English

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Etymology

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Heep +‎ -ish: From the Dickens character Uriah Heep, noted for his cloying humility, obsequiousness, and insincerity, the stereotypical yes man.

Adjective

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Heepish (comparative more Heepish, superlative most Heepish)

  1. Exhibiting cloying, insincere obsequiousness.
    • 1863 Jan, “Editor's Table”, in The Continental Monthly, volume III, number 1, page 127:
      The London Times will, we presume, impugn the motives of the charity—call it Pecksniffian and Heep-ish—or possibly try to prove that the Federals had no hand in the good deed.
    • 2001, Nicholas Peel, The Lost Story, iUniverse, page 130:
      The two functionaries were all oleaginous smiles and Heepish hand-wringing declaring their eagerness to be of service to such a fine and deserving young person.
    • 2004, Reginald Hill, Good Morning, Midnight[1], HarperCollins:
      Dalziel scratched his crotch reflectively, then replied in a fawning Heepish tone, “I'm sorry, Mrs Maciver, I know what you must be feeling, but it's not my decision. ..."
    • 2014, Siri Hustvedt, The Blazing World, Simon and Schuster, page 40:
      As an interviewer, i quickly grasped that the key was to ingratiate myself with the subject, to be admiring, even humble, but not Heepish.