tsuris
English
WOTD – 23 January 2010
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Yiddish צרות (tsores), plural of צרה (tsore, “trouble, problem”), from Hebrew צָרָה (tsará, “trouble, tragedy, calamity”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /tsʊɹɪs/, /tsuːɹɪs/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
tsuris (uncountable)
- (US, colloquial, Jewish English) Problems or troubles.
- 1968, Ronald Sukenick, Up, Dial Press, page 84:
- You think you got troubles? You should go down there and talk to some of those schnorrers. Still, what chutzbah[sic]. It's like the Jewish moral sense, emerging from all that tsuris.
- 1991, John Updike, Rabbit at Rest:
- “Sounds to me, my friend, like you got some tsuris. Not full grown yet, not gehoketh tsuris, but tsuris.”
- 1997, Hilary Henkin and David Mamet, Wag the Dog, New Line Cinema
- Stanley Moss: I don't need this gig, I don't need the money, I don't need the tsuris ... I don't need it.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:tsuris.
Translations
problems or troubles
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