Hardy: Far From the Madding Crowd
Honegger: Symphony #2

"Cringe" as an adjective: I approve

Sometimes I get tired of being a curmudgeon regarding various current phenomena in the continual flux that is the English language. I'm pretty sure my wife is tired of it, too--of hearing me grumble, for instance, about how annoying the word "iconic" has become in recent years. (But then I don't think she pays much attention, either.) I did a whole post on that one a couple of years ago: Worst Use of "Iconic". And complained about a couple of others in Further Linguistic Defeats. Any living language is always changing, but with English being so widely spoken, and with so wide and rapid a diffusion of these changes, the flux is extreme now.  

But I'm not always negative, and I'm here today to give my approval to the use of the verb "cringe" as an adjective. ("Cringe" is also a noun, but it seems to be rarely used. My unabridged dictionary defines it as "a cringing.") It refers to the phenomenon in which one is embarrassed on behalf of someone else: as in "He tried to sing 'Color My World' at the wedding reception, and it was so cringe." As I was writing this I came up with several more examples, but am stopping with that one, because everyone knows what I mean, and the sensation is very unpleasant. 

The essence of cringe is that the person doing the cringe thing is unaware of it; he should be embarrassed but is not. If the groom trips and falls on the way down the aisle at the wedding, it isn't cringe--he is embarrassed and we feel sorry for him. If he sings "Color My World" badly but thinks he's doing fine, it's cringe. We feel sorry for him, but mostly we feel embarrassed for him, and in our minds are begging for him to stop, because the feeling we have is normally quite painful. The spectator who enjoys the situation is cruel,  and probably hates the person doing the cringe thing. 

There are serviceable and grammatically conventional ways of making this point: "cringe-making," "cringe-inducing," and so forth, but they're a bit clumsy. "Cringey" doesn't really do the job, at least to my ear, as it seems to refer to the person who is cringing, not to behavior which causes others to cringe. "Cringe" is more effective--quick and sharp. 

If you read the posts I linked to above, you might complain about my complaining about the use of the noun "cliché" as an adjective while putting the verb "cringe" to work similarly. Well, in somewhat weak defense, I note that "cliché" has a perfectly good adjectival form of long-standing  use: "clichéd." It doesn't even require that we pronounce another syllable, which would interfere with our very busy 21st century lifestyle.

So what, you say? How does that make a usage like "that's so cringe" acceptable? It doesn't, really, by any sort of consistent rule. I confess to inconsistency. Still, as an adjective, "cringe" seems to me to add something useful and colorful to the language, whereas "cliché" as an adjective does not; it just sounds sloppy and ignorant.

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Not a fan of the word used that way. I say 'cringey,' which I think already exists.

I mentioned "cringey," but as I said to me that suggests a reference to the person who is cringing, not to the thing that's causing him to cringe, as is meant by the current use of "cringe." It will do, though, and people do in fact use it in the same way. Interestingly, my unabridged dictionary does not include "cringey," so I guess it's a relatively recent development.

I noticed, too, an interesting obsolete use: "to draw up, to contract." I suspect that may have preceded the later sense(s). It's definitely a component of the sensation we're talking about.

Another iconic post.
Cringeworthy seems to be used quite a bit these days also.

:-):-):-)

I do sometimes use "cringe-inducing." As you say, a bit clumsy, but the added emphasis serves to nail the point.

I think I like it. At least, when I hear it, it doesn't make me cringe.

AMDG

I was just reminded of how awful cringe can be (hmm, I just made it a noun). There's a Brit detective show called Madame Blanc which has a couple of the most cringe characters I've ever seen. They're meant to be, but are possibly a bit over the top.

The show is what's become somewhat identifiable type--pretty lightweight, centered on a middle-aged woman who is divorced or widowed or just single, and solves crimes while finding romance in some fairly exotic and definitely non-British locale.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Your Information

(Name is required. Email address will not be displayed with the comment.)