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Chic (; ), meaning "stylish" or "smart", is an element of fashion. It was originally a French-speaking world, French word.


Etymology

'':wikt:chic#French, Chic'' is a French-speaking world, French word, established in English language, English since at least the 1870s. Early references in English dictionaries classified it as slang and New Zealand-born lexicographer Eric Partridge noted, with reference to its Colloquialism, colloquial meaning, that it was "not so used in Fr[ench]." Gustave Flaubert notes in ''Madame Bovary'' (published in 1856) that "chicard" (one who is chic) is then Parisian very current slang for "classy" noting, perhaps derisively, perhaps not, that it was bourgeois. There is a similar word in German language, German, '':wikt:schick, schick'', with a meaning similar to ''chic'', which may be the origin of the word in French language, French; another theory links ''chic'' to the word '':wikt:chicane#French, chicane''. Although the French pronunciation (/ˈʃiːk/ or "sheek") is now virtually standard and was that given by H. W. Fowler, Fowler, ''chic'' was often rendered in the anglicisation, anglicised form of "chick". In a fictional vignette (literature), vignette for ''Punch (magazine), Punch'' (''c''. 1932) Mrs F. A. Kilpatrick attributed to a young woman who 70 years later would have been called a "chavette" the following assertion: "It 'asn't go no buttons neither ... That's the latest ideer. If you want to be chick you just 'ang on to it, it seems". By contrast, in Anita Loos' novel, ''Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (novel), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes'' (1925), the diarist Lorelei Lee recorded that "the French use the word 'sheik' for everything, while we only seem to use it for gentlemen when they seem to resemble Rudolf Valentino" (a pun derived from the latter's being the star of the 1921 silent film, ''The Sheik (film), The Sheik''). The Oxford Dictionary gives the comparative and superlative forms of ''chic'' as ''chicer'' and ''chicest''. These are wholly English words: the French equivalents would be ''plus chic'' and ''le/la plus chic''. ''Super-chic'' is sometimes used: "super-chic Incline bucket in mouth-blown, moulded glass". An adverb ''chicly'' has also appeared: "Pamela Gross ... turned up chicly dressed down". The use of the French ''très chic'' (very chic) by an English speaker – "Luckily it's ''très'' chic to be neurotic in New York" – is usually rather pretentious, but sometimes merely facetiousMicky Dolenz of The Monkees described the Indigenous peoples of the Americas, American Indian-style suit he wore at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 as ''"très chic"''. ''Über-chic'' is roughly the mock-German equivalent: "Like his clubs, it's super-modern, über-chic, yet still comfortable". The opposite of "chic" is ''unchic'': "the then uncrowded, unchic little port of Saint Tropez, St Tropez".


Quotes

Over the years "chic" has been applied to, among other things, social events, situations, individuals, and modes or styles of dress. It was one of a number of "slang words" that H. W. Fowler linked to particular professions – specifically, to "society journalism" – with the advice that, if used in such a context, "familiarity will disguise and sometimes it will bring out its slanginess." *In 1887 ''The Lady (magazine), The Lady'' noted that "the ladies of New York ... think no form of entertainment so ''chic'' as a luncheon party." *Forty years later, in E. F. Benson's novel ''Lucia in London'' (1927), Lucia was aware that the arrival of a glittering array of guests ''before their hostess'' for an impromptu post-opera gathering was "the most ''chic'' informality that it was possible to conceive." *In the 1950s, Edith Head designed a classic dress, worn by Audrey Hepburn in the film Sabrina (1954 film), ''Sabrina'' (1954), of which she remarked, "If it had been worn by somebody with no ''chic'' it would never have become a style." *By the turn of the 21st century, the travel company Thomas Cook was advising those wishing to sample the nightlife of the sophisticated Mediterranean resort of Monte Carlo that "casual is fine (except at the Casino) but make it expensive, and very chic, casual if you want to blend in." *According to American magazine ''Harper's Bazaar'' (referring to the "dramatic simplicity" of the day-wear of couturier Cristóbal Balenciaga, 1895–1972), "elimination is the secret of chic."See ''New Yorker'', 3 July 2006


See also

*List of chics *Superficiality


References

{{Wiktionary Fashion aesthetics