Chadband

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

After the character of Mr Chadband in Charles Dickens' novel Bleak House (1852).

Noun[edit]

Chadband (plural Chadbands)

  1. A smug preacher.
    • 1891, Alfred Trumble, The Art Collector: A Journal Devoted to the Arts and the Crafts, page 50:
      Chadbands have nothing to do with art, and their appearance on every possible occasion is an insult to artistic intelligence. The priest is the enemy of art; always has been, and always will be. Art is pagan, and the prattle of the preacher will never make it anything else.
    • 1941, H. G. Wells, You Can't Be Too Careful:
      Would a Chadband, a deliberate hypocrite, have achieved the stern self-abandonment with which he now set himself to readjust Edward Albert's affairs?