See also: put on the Ritz

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Evokes the image of putting on extravagent clothing worthy of the luxurious Ritz Hotel in London, opened in 1906. Phrase in print by 1921.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Verb edit

put on the ritz (third-person singular simple present puts on the ritz, present participle putting on the ritz, simple past and past participle put on the ritz)

  1. (idiomatic) to make a show of luxury and extravagance
    • 1921 May 26, Chicago Daily Tribune[1]:
      The whole gang has put on the Ritz and are strutting about like a collection of pouter pigeons.
    • 1929, Irving Berlin (lyrics and music), “Puttin' on the Ritz”:
      If you're blue and you don't know
      Where to go to
      Why don't you go
      where Harlem sits
      Puttin' on the Ritz.
      Spangled gowns
      Upon a bevy
      Of high browns
      From down the Levee, all misfits
      Puttin' on the Ritz.
    • 1989, Marylyn Springer, Arthur Frommer, Frommer's Guide to Florida, 1990 - Page 465[2]:
      "One of the most beautiful hotels to open in Florida in recent years, the Ritz-Carlton puts on the ritz but in subtle style, illustrating elegance without shouting about it."