heck-care
English
Etymology
heck + care, based on expressions such as "doesn't care a heck" and "care a heck of a lot".
Pronunciation
- (Singapore) IPA(key): /ˈhɛk ˌkɛː/, [ˈhɛk˦ ˌkʰɛː˦], (end of sentence) [-˦˧]
Adjective
heck-care (not comparable)
- (Singapore) Having a dismissively indifferent attitude; nonchalant.
- Some students have a heck-care attitude towards their studies.
- 1998 September 8, The New Paper:
- Okay, being heck-care about how you look doesn't mean you'll end up looking like this. But that doesn't mean it's all right to be heck-care.
- 2003 September, “Spreading like wildfire: Dragon Ash”, in The New Paper, page 35:
- THEY may look like "heck-care" young punks who hang out at Harajuku, but their powerful music is serious stuff.
- 2005, David Leo, Life's so like dat, page 73:
- The "heck-care" attitude ignores the fact that using a handphone while driving could distract a driver's attention and cause a serious accident.
- 2008 March 2, “Motorists' burden"”, in The Straits Times:
- This burden of responsibility is behind motorists' frustrations with the "heck-care" attitude of reckless jaywalkers.
Translations
apathetic or uninterested — see indifferent
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