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sass
1[sas]
noun
stewed fruit; fruit sauce.
fresh vegetables.
sass
2[sas]
noun
impudent or disrespectful back talk.
Both parents refuse to take any sass from their kids.
verb (used with object)
to answer back in an impudent manner.
Don't sass your mother.
sass
/ æ /
noun
insolent or impudent talk or behaviour
verb
to talk or answer back in such a way
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of sass1
Example Sentences
It’s not just the look, but it’s also like the way that they carry themselves and how much sass, how much class, and you know how these women behave.
He said Alice loved to perform and that the stage would provide a "space where children are going to show off their flair, their sass – and Alice had sass in bucketloads".
Before that reveal, she’s playing a young adult with sass and a great sense of humor.
In conclusion, she says with more than a hint of sass, “For all the cranky, musty, dusty adults out there who think little kids shouldn’t be using skin care ... get it together!”
By the 1950s, she was as famous for her sex appeal as she was for her sass, on Broadway, television and touring nationally as a singer on the nightclub circuit.
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