Crossword clues for sassy
sassy
- Full of pizzazz
- Sarah Vaughan nickname
- Prone to backtalk
- Magazine for young women
- Apt to talk back
- With too much mouth
- With too much lip
- Unwilling to be talked down to
- Showing a 'tude
- Prone to back talk
- Like a spoiled brat
- Former teen magazine
- Distinctively stylish
- Bold as brass
- With lots of backtalk
- With attitude
- With an attitude
- With a lot of lip
- Verbally disrespectful
- Unlikely to take shit
- Too smart, perhaps
- Tending to respond with snark
- Teen magazine that had a "Dear Boy" column
- Smart's partner?
- Smart's partner
- Showing attitude
- Showing 'tude
- Right pert
- Prone to talk back
- Prone to sarcastic replies
- Prone to impudence
- Not very respectful
- Likely to react?
- Likely to give some lip
- Like one deserving a timeout, maybe
- Liable to talk back
- Jane Pratt's old magazine
- Impudent: Slang
- Heavy on attitude
- Having a lot of cheek
- Giving a lot of lip
- Given to insolence
- Full of cheeky attitude
- Full of cheek
- Fond of the side-eye or upside-down-smiley emoji, perhaps
- Flip or cheeky
- Childishly disrespectful
- Chic or jaunty
- Cat in ''Homeward Bound'' films
- Burns novel, "Cold --- Tree"
- Bold: Dial
- Between playful and brazen
- '90s teen-girl mag
- Full of vim and vinegar
- Fresh, in a way
- Impertinent
- Pert and impertinent
- Giving a little lip
- Nickname for Sarah Vaughan
- Hardly respectful
- Impudently bold
- Flip, in a way
- Insolent
- Smart-mouthed cat in "Homeward Bound"
- Cheeky and irreverent
- Flippant
- Bygone teen magazine
- Not polite
- Smart-alecky, in a way
- Full of lip
- Fresh-mouthed
- Talking trash
- Spirited
- Fresh, in an impolite way
- Mouthing off
- Having an attitude
- Full of spunk and lip
- Like the response "Talk to the hand!"
- Brazen
- Saying "Talk to the hand 'cause the face don't care," say
- Procacious
- Like a snip
- "Cold ___ Tree," Olive Burns novel
- Flip, as a snip
- Like a brat
- Brash
- Like impudent kids
- Like minxes
- Cheeky American, for example, grabbing seconds
- Impudent fool in extremes of stupidity
- Impertinent fool stretches the bounds of stupidity
- Out of line, in a way
- Full of attitude
- Far from polite
- Likely to talk back
- Full of back talk
- Given to back talk
- Full of moxie
- Full of backtalk
- Disrespectful, in a way
- Talking back
- Showing some cheek
- Sarah Vaughan's sobriquet
- Sarah Vaughan's nickname
- Giving lip
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1833, American English, alteration of saucy. Related: Sassily; sassiness.
Wiktionary
a. 1 impudent. 2 bold and spirited; cheeky. 3 Somewhat sexy and provocative. 4 vigorous. 5 lively.
WordNet
Wikipedia
Sassy magazine is a defunct teen magazine, aimed at teenage female fans of alternative and indie rock music. The magazine existed between 1988 and 1996.
Sassy may refer to:
- Sassy (magazine), a defunct publication for teen girls
- Sassy, Calvados, a commune in France
- SCUBA-2 All Sky Survey (SASSy), an astronomical survey
- Sassy, Inc., a baby-care products company owned by Kid Brands
In music:
- Sassy Pandez, English DJ
-
Sarah Vaughan (1924–1990), nicknamed Sassy, American jazz singer
- Sassy (album), a 1956 album by Sarah Vaughan
- Sassy, a member of the Japanese band High and Mighty Color
- "Sassy", a song by Katerina Graham
- "Sassy", a song by The Manhattan Transfer from The Offbeat of Avenues
- "Sassy", a song by Hole
Sassy is an album by American jazz vocalist Sarah Vaughan with Hal Mooney and his orchestra featuring tracks recorded in 1956 and released on the EmArcy label.
Usage examples of "sassy".
Those beautiful sable locks created a cascade of long, riotous waves that would entice a man to tangle his fingers in the silken mass while her sassy mouth sucked his cock.
He was a man possessed by her sweetness, her tight little body and sassy mouth.
The women wore matching black leather bras and miniskirts, and black leather collars Sassy was willing to bet were studded with stones a hell of a lot more expensive than mere rhinestones.
Sasha, or the variant nickname Sassy, since she was old enough to express an opinion.
Michael holding Sassy before him with his arms clasped loosely around her waist.
Ignoring the dancers, who now included the multiply pierced mistress and her two attendants demonstrating some sort of line dance to another couple, Michael guided Sassy to an empty spot along the waist-high wall facing the ocean.
If Sassy had entertained any doubts that providing for her pleased Michael, he put them to rest most thoroughly.
Even so, the style was different enough from her usual smart-mouth attitude as Sassy D.
She tossed her short and sassy hair then squared her shoulders when a loud gasp resounded on the stage.
Mary, Martha, and Mary Ellen attended Annie, and little Sassy was a flower girl.
Perkins was making urgent, silent eye contact with her daughter, known to them all, but not to her parents, as Lizzie, who was sitting with Sassy on the lawn, some little distance away.
She glanced at Sassy Jackson, as if to reassure herself that she was the prettiest present, and turned to watch Jass.
She made a-hurried farewell to Sassy, and moved as quickly as feigned lack of interest would allow to be near him.
Charleston, and worn twice at most, but a party atmosphere prevailed, and the rest of the meal was spent in a discussion of new clothes for Sally and Sassy, and of who might be attending the wedding and who might not.
The family would be in Nashville for a week, which meant ten complete new outfits for Sally and Sassy, for no woman of substance would consider wearing the same thing twice in such fon-nidable society.