British slang, disparaging
: a young person in Britain of a type stereotypically known for engaging in aggressively loutish behavior especially when in groups and for wearing flashy jewelry and athletic casual clothing (such as tracksuits and baseball caps)
Like Eminem, Lady Sovereign is a poster child for the white lower-middle class. She's what's known in the London press as a "chav": a thieving, pot-smoking, gaudy-jewelry-wearing, white city kid with no ambition.—Martin Edlund, New York Sun, 12 July 2005 Chavs take a lot of explaining, but stereotypical adjectives are: binge-drinking, bling-loving, boob-displaying, Burberry-wearing.—Vogue, April 2006 "Chav"—the champion buzzword of 2004 in Britain, according to one language maven there—refers to something between a subculture and a social class. … the unofficial definition sounds rather condescending or even cruel: a clueless suburbanite with appalling taste and a tendency toward track suits and loud jewelry.—Rob Walker, New York Times, 2 Jan. 2005
chavvy
adjective
chavvier; chavviest
"She looked too chavvy and cheap on the first day of auditions," a source tells the Sun. "They want her to have a designer look with chic class—more Posh Spice than Vicky Pollard in Little Britain, which is how she has looked more than a few times."
—Marina Hyde, The Guardian (London), 7 June 2013
They might look like those white chavvy high-tops sold for 20 quid in discount sports stores. However, the shoes in question are made from the skins of exotic animals.
—Roxanne Sorooshian, Sunday Herald, 3 Mar. 2013
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