Glossary entry

Dutch term or phrase:

stresskonijn

English translation:

nervous nelly/Nellie

Added to glossary by Lianne van de Ven
Jun 7, 2010 06:23
13 yrs ago
Dutch term

stresskonijn

Dutch to English Other General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters
Je kan X bezwaarlijk een stresskonijn noemen.
You can hardly call X a drama queen?
Change log

Jun 12, 2010 22:47: Lianne van de Ven Created KOG entry

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (2): Buck, writeaway

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Discussion

Stuart Robertson Jun 8, 2010:
stress puppy / stressaholic i think this may well depend on the context. a "stress puppy" is someone who enjoys working under stress, but moans about it constantly. What I would refer to as a "stressaholic" is someone who stresses over the most trivial of matters...

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/stress puppy?qsrc=244...
http://www.macmillandictionaries.com/wordoftheweek/archive/0...

Proposed translations

+1
7 hrs
Selected

nervous nelly/Nellie

This seems to fit the stresskonijn better: a timid or worrisome person
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nervous nelly

A person whose personality and usual behavior are characterized by worry, insecurity, and timidity.
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/nervous_Nellie#English

The stress monkey, indeed, is an external source of stress.
Note from asker:
I agree with Glenda that I think that this fits the context best, although I opted for a different term
Peer comment(s):

neutral Barend van Zadelhoff : I think "nervous nelly" refers to a personality trait (see your own definition) rather than to the way a person may respond to stress. Apart from that, the expression seems to stem from a time when women were considered less assertive than men .. by men.
1 hr
Find a man, not a spineless dweeb who doesn't know how to get past himself long enough to figure out what to wear, where to go and how to set the tone for a date. If he is a nervous Nelly now, what's the next excuse.
agree Glenda Janssen : I think this captures it best.
3 days 5 hrs
thank you
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+1
15 mins

stress monkey

It seems that the two languages opted for different animals here.

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Note added at 3 hrs (2010-06-07 09:45:04 GMT)
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Context, context, context.... which was not provided

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Note added at 4 hrs (2010-06-07 10:50:12 GMT)
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You can indeed get the stress monkey off your back, but you can also be one (stresskonijn). Various refs on the internet, here is just one:

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=stress monkey
Note from asker:
I had not thought of this, but don't you get a stress monkey off your back? I just thought that it meant that he was unflappable?
Peer comment(s):

agree Barend van Zadelhoff : it refers to the exaggerated way monkeys sometimes respond to nothing really to be upset about
9 hrs
Thank you
agree Verginia Ophof
9 hrs
Thank you
neutral Stuart Robertson : I've not heard this term before, although I have heard of just "getting a monkey off one's back" without the stress bit! If the animal component were essential, I'd have opted for a "stress puppy" yet it depends on the context...
18 hrs
Have a look at the link I provided and google the term. W.r.t. context, the asker seems to be very reluctant to provide any (see this question and others). // Isn't a stress puppy someone who strives on stress, i.e. the exact opposite of a stress monkey?
disagree Bryan Crumpler : yeah ok, but Urban Dictionary is a crowd-sourced reference, and requires validation either by thumbs up or thumbs down to gain any credibility. This entry has neither.
2 days 22 hrs
But if it's available on the internet it must be true ;)
Something went wrong...
3 days 4 hrs

stress puppy

The informal term stress puppy has been used on both sides of the Atlantic since the mid-nineties, and is one of many coinings spawned by the increasing use of ‘office jargon’, humorous terms intended to relieve the monotony of working life as they describe individuals and working practices that many people recognise and relate to.

In addition to stress puppy, among the more recent innovations for describing individuals in the office environment are informal terms like alpha geek, to describe the most knowledgeable, technically proficient person in an office or workgroup, and idea hamster (also ideas hamster), referring to someone who continually seems to have and communicate new ideas.


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Note added at 3 days4 hrs (2010-06-10 10:53:03 GMT)
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This is more someone who can handle stress I think... it might fit your context though :-)
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