In her novels, Jane Austen (1775鈥1817) scrutinized the ways that social codes and class place constraints on individuals and relationships. Her own use of language, however, was anything but constrained. It was so playful and inventive鈥攍ike tittupy, or “bouncing all around,” which a character uses to describe a rickety carriage in Northanger Abbey.
While she may not have exactly coined words like tittupy, Austen’s books and letters are often the first recorded instance of them, and the enduring popularity of her work no doubt gives them continued life. Whether you’re a Janeite or not, here are a few more of the words Jane Austen popularized that still sparkle today.
cousinly
… that cousinly little interview must remain a perfect secret. 鈥摈别谤蝉耻补蝉颈辞苍 (1817)
There’s sisterly and brotherly. There’s motherly and fatherly. Why, there’s even daughterly and sonly. So, why not cousinly? There was for Austen. True to form,听cousinly means “like or befitting a cousin.”
Now, a听kissing cousin may not sound very cousinly, but it simply means “a distant relative one is familiar enough with to greet with a kiss,” as on the cheek. By extension, kissing cousin can refer to anything “closely related or very similar.”
coze
Miss Crawford … proposed their going up into her room, where they might have a comfortable coze. 鈥擬ansfield Park听(1814)
With its resemblance to cozy,听coze sounds comfortable, indeed. A听coze is “a friendly talk.” It can also be a verb for having such a chat.
The origin is uncertain, but it might come from the French causer, “to chat,” ultimately from the same Latin root that gives us cause. We think there’s plenty of cause to use a word like听coze, Austen’s legacy just one among them.
gad
I have no very good opinion of Mrs. Charles’s听nursery-maid: I hear strange stories of her; she is听always upon the gad … 鈥摈别谤蝉耻补蝉颈辞苍 (1817)
We don’t have any opinions on Mrs. Charles’s nursery-maid, but we do think听gad is a very good word. To gad听(about) is “to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another.” So, to be upon the gad, as Austen writes,听is like boppin’ around from place to place, maybe even sticking your nose in other people’s business.
We could also call the nursery-maid a听gadabout, originally听like a “busybody” or “gossip,” though this noun later went on to refer to “someone who travels widely for pleasure”鈥攌ind of like an old-fashioned word for a jetsetter.
itty
My dear itty Dordy’s remembrance of me is very pleasing to me. 鈥擫别迟迟别谤蝉 (1798)
Itty is an itty-bitty, teeny-weeny, cutesy-poo way of saying little, which Jane Austen based on the way her little nephew, George (Dordy), struggled with certain pronunciations, as young children do. Austen really was a novelist of manners.
sprawly
I am quite angry with myself for not writing closer; why is my alphabet so much more sprawly than Yours? 鈥擫别迟迟别谤蝉听(1798)
Another joyful bit of linguistic creativity from Jane Austen is sprawly. The genius of sprawly, we find, is that it seems to characterize something that stretches out but in its own contained sort of way.
A big city is sprawling, sure … but what about that little mess you make when you get home from work, slough off your bag, toss aside your keys, and kick off your shoes? Sprawly.