
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day genteel
Mar 31, 2026
A lively look at the word genteel and its two main senses: upper‑class social status and quietly polite manners. A contemporary example shows British upper‑class mores. A literary detour argues Theodore Dreiser was anything but genteel, with a focus on Sister Carrie and its controversial reception.
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Two Sides Of Genteel
- Genteel denotes ties to high social status and can act as an old-fashioned synonym for aristocratic.
- It also describes a polite, quietly appealing quality, illustrated by the phrase genteel manners in the episode.
Genteel Used To Describe British Upper Class
- Peter Sokolowski cites a Daily Beast sentence showing genteel used to describe British upper-class mores learned at Oxford.
- The example: "They understand the genteel, often mysterious... mores of the British upper class."
Dreiser As Antithesis Of Genteel
- The episode recounts David Freedman's 1975 remark that Theodore Dreiser was "nothing genteel," contrasting Dreiser's poverty and raw subject matter with genteel literary norms.
- Sister Carrie shocked polite sensibilities, sold under 500 copies initially, and was later deemed a masterpiece.



