goody two-shoes

goody two-shoes

1. adjective (used as a modifier before a noun) Of or having prudish, self-righteous, or rigidly moral standards. Many have been critical of the agency as being nothing but a goody two-shoes organization more concerned with telling people how to behave than serving their best interests.
2. An exceedingly or haughtily prudish, self-righteous, or rigidly moral person; someone who conforms inflexibly to the rules or the law. Mary is such a goody two-shoes, always squealing to the teacher when one of us does something against the rules. Our gang would have control of half the city if that goody two-shoes hadn't somehow gotten himself elected governor.
See also: goody
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

goody two-shoes

A prudish, self-righteous individual, a goody-goody. For example, Phyllis was a real goody two-shoes, tattling on her friends to the teacher. This expression alludes to the main character of a nursery tale, The History of Goody Two-Shoes (1765), who was so pleased when receiving a second shoe that she kept saying "Two shoes." The goody in the story is short for goodwife but means "goody-goody" in the idiom.
See also: goody
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a goody two-shoes

INFORMAL
A goody two-shoes is someone who tries to please someone in authority or who never does anything wrong. No child wants to be a goody two-shoes, and this is one way for them to demonstrate that they're not. Note: This expression is used to show disapproval.
See also: goody
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

goody two-shoes

n. someone who tries to behave better than anyone else. (Also a term of address.) I’m no goody two-shoes. I just like to keep my nose clean.
See also: goody
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

goody-two-shoes

A self-righteous, smugly virtuous person. The term comes from the title and main character of a nursery tale, The History of Goody Two-Shoes (1765), believed to have been written by Oliver Goldsmith. She owned but a single shoe, and when she was given a pair of shoes she was so delighted that she showed them to everyone, saying, “Two shoes.” Today the term is often shortened to goody-goody, as in “She’s a real goody-goody, always playing up to her boss.”
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer

goody two-shoes

A self-righteous, vain person. The 18th-century children's story, The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes, attributed to Oliver Goldsmith, was a version of Cinderella. The title character, named after an already-established phrase, was an orphan who was so poor, she owned only one shoe. When a rich benefactor gave her a complete set of footwear, she repeated her delighted in having “two shoes.” The phrase “Goody Two-Shoes” developed its negative connotation because the girl subsequently married into money, which cast suspicion on her virtuous nature.
See also: goody
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price
See also:
  • a goody two-shoes
  • goody-two-shoes
  • let he that is without sin cast the first stone
  • let he who is without sin cast the first stone
  • let him that is without sin cast the first stone
  • let him who is without sin cast the first stone
  • grammar Nazi
  • goody
  • goody gumdrops
  • bulletproof
References in periodicals archive
EMMA Watson really is as much of a goody two-shoes as Hermione, her Harry Potter character.
FOR being such a miserable Bible-bashing goody two-shoes, Cameron has to be our dope of the day.
"I'm not saying I'm a goody two-shoes because I'm not.
NOW this could be interesting - notoriously wild Spice Girl MEL B stepped out hand in hand with Miss Goody Two-Shoes LEONA LEWIS in Las Vegas this weekend.
SHE'S meant to be loved up with toyboy Jack Tweedy but it looks like Big Brother's Jade is not such a Goody two-shoes after all.
And no, I'm not a Goody Two-Shoes, I do let my speed creep up on motorways and dual carriageways, but I don't whinge and whine about measures in place to stop me doing so.
Jamie has the looks, the figure, the charisma - and the intelligence - to realise that playing the Wicked Witch is a surer route to the top than being Miss Goody Two-Shoes.
Spicing up her image in the latest edition of Elle magazine, she said people's biggest misconception about her is "that I'm a goody two-shoes. I'm not.
We live in a namby pamby society full of goody two-shoes who don't live in the real world.
Keith, from Larne, Co Antrim, says he is fed up with people thinking they're a goody two-shoes band, that he doesn't drink often but goes on the occasional bender, and that he has every right to speak his mind.
GOODY two-shoes Rachel Stevens doesn't always get it right.
And he wants Tamzin, 33, to play the goody two-shoes lead role made famous on screen by JULIE ANDREWS.
NOT content with crooning his way around the world, goody two-shoes Ronan Keating, 24, is harbouring hopes of working in films.
They feared Sarah Hills, the prim, goody two-shoes character from EastEnders, was in danger of being sexually abused when she went to a local fundamental Christian group.
And following his "goody two-shoes" text to Alan Shearer, it means the door to St James's Park is now shut on him forever.