officious+person
101Parks and Recreation — This article is about the television series. For a list of parks and recreation departments, see Department of Parks and Recreation. Parks and Recreation Parks and Recreation title card Genre Sitcom …
102impudent, impertinent — These words refer to bold, rude, and arrogant acts or speech. Impudent suggests shameless impertinence: an impudent young person, an impudent response to a friendly suggestion. Impertinent has a primary meaning of inappropriate, that is, not… …
103Mayers — This interesting name is of early medieval English origin, and is one of the patronymic forms of the surname Mayer , found as Mayers, Myers, Meyers and Miers, the s being an abbreviated form of son of Mayer . The surname is an occupational or… …
104between — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) In the space separating two things Nouns 1. (act of lying between) interjacence, intervenience, interlocation, interpenetration; interjection, interpolation, interlineation, interspersion, intercalation; …
105efficious — This word describes a person who beleives in the adherence to rules, no matter how ridiculous they are. I made it up to describe my office managers old assistant. I guess it s a combination of efficient and vicious and probably officious. What an …
106efficious — This word describes a person who beleives in the adherence to rules, no matter how ridiculous they are. I made it up to describe my office managers old assistant. I guess it s a combination of efficient and vicious and probably officious. What an …
107muck-a-muck — (MUK ah muk) [Chinook jargon: plenty to eat] In slang, when preceded by the word “high ,” an important or high ranking person with an arrogant or officious manner …
108nudnik — (NOOD nik) [Yiddish] A slang term for an annoying, tiresome, dull person; a pest. Jane Austen masterfully portrayed one hen pecking, match making, officious nudnik of a mother after another. The New York Times, May 11, 1997 …
109familiar — 1 Familiar, intimate, close, confidential, chummy, thick are comparable when meaning near to one another because of constant or frequent association, shared interests and activities, or common sympathies, or, when applied to words or acts,… …
110offer — vb Offer, proffer, tender, present, prefer can all mean to lay, set, or put something before another for acceptance. Offer, the most common of these words, frequently implies a putting before one something which may be accepted or rejected {there …