Word
Of
The
Day
dudgeon
dudgeon \DUJ-un\
noun
Dudgeon is typically used in the phrase “in high dudgeon” to describe someone who is angry and offended by something they perceive to be unfair or wrong.
// The customer stormed out of the store in high
dudgeon after the manager refused to give them a refund for their purchase.
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Examples:
“She was in high
dudgeon because her expensive lunch was punctuated by noise from a child ‘a real menace’ whose parents, she said, appeared oblivious to the noise while staff … played with and entertained the tot. If the parents could afford the bill for a place like that, they could afford a babysitter, she snipped.” — Rachel Moore,
The Eastern Daily Press (Norwich, England), 6 Feb. 2026
Did you know?
Dudgeon is today most often used in the phrase “in high dudgeon” to describe someone in a fit of
pique, or more colloquially, in a
snit: they are angry and offended because of something they perceive as unfair or wrong. The word has been a part of the English language since at least the late 1500s, but its origins are a mystery. Conjectures connecting
dudgeon to a Welsh word,
dygen, meaning “malice,” have no basis. Also, there does not appear to be any connection to an even older
dudgeon—a term once used for a dagger or a kind of wood out of which dagger handles were made.