mischievous

[ mis-chuh-vuh s ]
/ ˈmɪs tʃə vəs /

adjective

maliciously or playfully annoying.
causing annoyance, harm, or trouble.
roguishly or slyly teasing, as a glance.
harmful or injurious.

Origin of mischievous

1300–50; Middle English mischevous < Anglo-French meschevous. See mischief, -ous

pronunciation note for mischievous

The word mischievous has three syllables, mis-chie-vous, with the stress on the first syllable: [mis-chuh-vuh s] /ˈmɪs tʃə vəs/. There is a common tendency to shift the stress to the second syllable and say or write the word as if there were an extra letter i after the v, turning it into a four-syllable word: [mis-chee-vee-uh s] /mɪsˈtʃi vi əs/. These alterations of the pronunciation (and sometimes even the spelling) may occur in part because in many English words ie is pronounced like ee, as in chief, in part because many words end with [-ee-uh s] /-i əs/, spelled either -ious (as in devious ) or -eous (as in aqueous ), and in part because of confusion over where the second i in the word belongs. The Oxford English Dictionary reports that for some time in the evolution of the word—from about the sixteenth to the eighteenth century— mischievious was actually a fairly standard alternative spelling. Today, however, both the four-syllable spelling and the four-syllable pronunciation are generally regarded as nonstandard.

OTHER WORDS FROM mischievous

Example sentences from the Web for mischievousness

British Dictionary definitions for mischievousness

mischievous
/ (ˈmɪstʃɪvəs) /

adjective

inclined to acts of mischief
teasing; slightly malicious a mischievous grin
causing or intended to cause harm a mischievous plot

Derived forms of mischievous

mischievously, adverb mischievousness, noun