Explanation

  • Feeling or showing strong jealousy towards someone's possessions, success, or advantages.

Origin

  • The association of the color green with jealousy and ill-health dates back to ancient Greece. They believed jealousy produced excess bile, giving the skin a sickly greenish tint.
  • William Shakespeare popularized the connection, notably in Othello where Iago warns Othello to beware, my lord, of jealousy; / It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock / The meat it feeds on.
  • Green is often associated with sickness or biliousness, metaphorically linked to the sickness of envy.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Jelly (Playful, common online and among younger people)
  • Salty (More about bitterness or resentment, often from losing or being slighted, but can overlap with envy)
  • Major FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out envy of experiences)

Vulgar/Emphatic:

  • Pissed that someone has something. (More anger than pure envy)

Situational Appropriateness

  • Informal to semi-formal.
  • Generally understood but avoid in very formal contexts where expressing strong emotion like envy might be inappropriate.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • The connection between green and envy is specific to this idiom and related concepts; learners shouldn't assume green always means envy.

Examples

  • I was green with envy when I saw her new sports car.
  • He admitted he was green with envy over his colleague's promotion.
  • Look at their vacation photos! Makes you green with envy, doesn't it?

Dialogue

Liam: Did you see Maya's photos from her trip to Japan?

Chloe: Yes! Cherry blossoms, amazing food... I'm absolutely green with envy.

Liam: Me too. We really need to plan a proper vacation soon.

Social Media Examples

  • Comment on travel post: OMG your hotel view! 😍 I'm green with envy right now! #travelgoals #jelly
  • Tweet: My friend just got tickets to see Taylor Swift and I am officially green with envy. 😭 #Swiftie #ErasTour

Response Patterns

  • Acknowledging the reason for envy: Yeah, that new car is amazing.
  • Sharing the feeling: You're telling me! I wish that were me.
  • Downplaying (if directed at oneself): Oh, it's not that great, really.
  • Playful accusation: Someone sounds a bit green with envy!

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After someone says they are green with envy:

  • Asking for details: What exactly are you envious of?
  • Expressing understanding: I can see why, it's impressive.

After someone is described as green with envy:

  • Asking for the story: Oh really? What happened?

Conversation Starter

  • Can be, especially in reaction to news or seeing something desirable. Wow, look at that prize – makes you green with envy!

Intonation

  • Emphasis usually on GREEN and ENVY.
  • Can be said with genuine feeling or in a lighter, more exaggerated way. GREEN with ENVY.

Generation Differences

  • Widely understood. Younger generations might also use jelly more frequently.

Regional Variations

  • Common across all major English-speaking regions.
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