WORD OF THE DAY
ritzy / adjective / RIT-see
Definition
1: snobbish
2a: impressively or ostentatiously fancy or stylish
2b: fashionable, posh
Examples
“Situated on nearly two acres of land in the ritzy neighborhood of Bel Air, the sprawling manor is surrounded by a stone wall and gates and now boasts an impressive six bedrooms, seven bathrooms, and two half-baths.”
— Gabrielle Chung, People, 13 Aug. 2021
Thompson Madrid is set within two historic buildings in the Spanish capital’s ritzy Golden Mile district.
— Rachel Cormack, Robb Report, 22 Aug. 2022
Did You Know?
César Ritz (1850-1918) earned worldwide renown for the luxurious hotels bearing his name in London and Paris. (The Ritz-Carlton hotel company is a contemporary descendant of these enterprises.)
Although they were by no means the first to cater to high-end clients, Ritz’s hotels quickly earned reputations as symbols of opulence. F. Scott Fitzgerald, a writer who often focused on the fashionably wealthy, titled one of his short stories “The Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” and the phrase “to put on the ritz” means “to indulge in ostentatious display.”
The adjective ritzy, describing either something fancy or stylish, or the haughty attitudes of the wealthy elite, first checked into the English language in 1920.
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