Tasty word...like
obstreperous, I wonder how I can sneak this one into everyday conversation...
gaucherie \goh-shuh-REE\, noun:
1. A socially awkward or tactless act.
2. Lack of tact; boorishness; awkwardness.
If you find yourself sitting next to an obviously
prosperous guest at a dinner party and your host introduces
him (it will be a him) as a "successful barrister", you
will be guilty of a gaucherie of the crassest kind if you
exclaim: "How fascinating! If I promise not to call you
Rumpole, will you tell me about your goriest murder
trials?"
--Nick Cohen, "Don't leave justice to the judges," [1]New
Statesman, December 13, 1999
Here we see the insecure, unattractive woman who at long
last has found someone even more insecure and unattractive
than herself, calling attention to her companion's
gaucherie in order to feel, for once in her life, like the
belle of the ball.
--Florence King, "Out and About," [2]National Review,
November 9, 1998
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Gaucherie comes from the French, from gauche, "lefthanded;
awkward," from Old French, from gauchir, "to turn aside, to
swerve, to walk clumsily."
Synonyms: blunder, faux pas, gaffe. [3]Find more at
Thesaurus.com.
From
Word of the Way.