Dictionary Definition
tawdry adj
1 tastelessly showy; "a flash car"; "a flashy
ring"; "garish colors"; "a gaudy costume"; "loud sport shirts"; "a
meretricious yet stylish book"; "tawdry ornaments" [syn: brassy, cheap, flash, flashy, garish, gaudy, gimcrack, loud, meretricious, tacky, tatty, trashy]
2 cheap and shoddy; "cheapjack moviemaking...that
feeds on the low taste of the mob"- Judith Crist [syn: cheapjack, shoddy] [also: tawdriest, tawdrier]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Shortened from tawdry lace.Pronunciation
- /ˈtɔ:dri/
Translations
gaudy
- Portuguese: espalhafatoso e mixuruca - adj.
Extensive Definition
Æthelthryth, or Æðelþryð, (c. 636-23 June 679) is the proper name
for the popular Anglo-Saxon
saint almost universally
known as Etheldreda or by the pet form of Audrey (or variations).
She was an East Anglian princess, a Fenland queen and Abbess of
Ely in the English county of
Cambridgeshire.
Æthelthryth was probably born at Exning, near
Newmarket
in Suffolk.
She was one of four daughters of King
Anna of East Anglia (kd. 654), all of whom
eventually retired from the world and founded abbeys.
Æthelthryth made an early first marriage (c.
652) to
Tondberct, chief of the South Gyrvians, or "fenmen"
(gyr, Old English "fen") (d. 655). However, she managed to persuade
her husband to respect a vow of perpetual virginity she had made
before her marriage. Upon his death in 655, Æthelthryth
retired to the Isle of
Ely, given to her as her "morning gift" by Tondberct.
Æthelthryth subsequently remarried in 660, this time to
Ecgfrith,
King of Northumbria
again for political reasons. Shortly after Ecgfrith's accession to
the throne [670 AD], Æthelthryth became a nun. This step possibly
led to Ecgfrith's long quarrel with Wilfrid archbishop
of York. One
account holds that while Ecgfrith initially agreed that Æthelthryth
should continue to remain a virgin, in about 672 he wished to
consummate their marriage and even attempted to bribe Wilfrid to
use his influence on the queen to convince her. This tactic
failing, the king tried to take his queen from the cloister by
force. Æthelthryth fled to Ely with two faithful nuns and managed
to evade capture thanks, in part, to the miraculous rising of the
tide. Ecfrith later married a second wife, Eormenburg, and
expelled Wilfrid from his kingdom in 678.
According to the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle, Æthelthryth founded the monastery at Ely in 673; the monastery was
later destroyed in the Danish invasion of 870. Bede tells how after
her death, Æthelthryth's bones were disinterred by her sister and
successor, Abbess
Seaxburh of Ely, and buried in a white, marble coffin from
Cambridge.
Æthelthryth's sister, niece, and great-niece, all
royal princesses and two of them widowed queens (of Kent and
Mercia), followed her as abbesses of Ely.
In Ely Place,
Holborn,
London,
there is a church
dedicated to St. Etheldreda. It was originally part of the palace
of the Bishops of
Ely. After the English
Reformation, the palace was used by the Spanish Ambassadors,
enabling Roman Catholic worship to continue in the church.
Tawdry
The common version of Æthelthryth's name was St. Awdrey, which is the origin of the word tawdry. Her admirers bought modestly concealing lace goods at an annual fair held in her name in Ely. Fashion being what it is, as years passed, this lacework came to be seen as old-fashioned or cheap and poor quality goods. This was particularly so in the 17th century when some Puritans in eastern England looked down on any form of lacy dressiness.See also
References
External links
- Richard John King, 1862. Handbook of the Cathedrals of England (Oxford) (On-line text)
- Article from The Catholic Encyclopedia
- The Life of St. Aethelthryth by Ælfric
tawdry in French: Etheldrède
tawdry in Italian: Sant'Eteldreda di Ely
tawdry in Dutch: Ethelreda
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
blatant, brazen, brazenfaced, brummagem, cheap, cheapjack, chintzy, colorful, common, crude, extravagant, flagrant, flaring, flashy, flaunting, garish, gaudy, glaring, gorgeous, loud, lurid, meretricious, obtrusive, plastic, screaming, sensational, shabby, shameless, showy, sleazy, spectacular, tacky, tatty, tinny, tinsel, tinselly, vulgar