1
somewhat old-fashioned
: putting on or marked by airs of superiority : arrogant, presumptuous
uppity technicians
a small uppity country
The truth is I am tired every afternoon and there's nothing to be done about it. It's the nature of the disease. A lot of people decide I am bored or indifferent or uppity but at a certain hour of the day my motor cuts off automatically.—Flannery O'Connor
2
somewhat old-fashioned, disparaging + sometimes offensive; see usage paragraph below
: aspiring to a rank or position higher than one deserves or is entitled to
In a seller's market for labor, it seems, there is a danger that the help will get uppity.—Michael Lind
… a group of senior male executives referred to my staff of predominantly professional women as uppity.—Marion E. Gold
We talked as long as I dared. She told me to reverse the charges. It was my call, I said. She laughed and said I was getting uppity. I described Mrs. Burgess, how working for her was hardly like being a servant.—Paula Fox
Hagar, with child, despised her mistress and flaunted her pregnancy over her. … Sarah flew upon the uppity servant girl and drove her off into the desert.—Joseph Heller
uppitiness
noun
or less commonly uppityness
Usage of Uppity
The adjective uppity is an informal, somewhat old-fashioned word. When used to mean "arrogant" or "presumptuous," it is no more offensive than either of these synonyms. In its meaning of "aspiring to a rank or position higher than one deserves or is entitled to" it is decidedly disparaging, the implication of the word being that the one described does not deserve or is not entitled to rise in standing. Beyond this denotation, however, uppity has a long history of being applied to members of racial minorities and especially to Black people. Its association with such uses, and the bigotry they represent, means that when it is used to describe a member of a racial minority it is likely to be considered especially offensive.
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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