The
noun peeve, meaning an annoyance, is believed to have originated in the
United States early in the twentieth century, derived by
back-formation from the
adjective peevish, meaning "ornery or ill-tempered", which dates from the late 14th-century. The term
pet peeve was introduced to a wide readership in the single-panel
comic strip The Little Pet Peeve in the
Chicago Tribune during the period 1916–1920. The strip was created by cartoonist
Frank King, who also created the long-running
Gasoline Alley strip. King's "little pet peeves" were humorous critiques of generally thoughtless behaviors and nuisance frustrations. Examples included people reading the
inter-titles in
silent films aloud, cracking an egg only to smell that it's gone rotten,
back-seat drivers, and rugs that keep catching the bottom of the door and bunching up. King's readers submitted topics, including theater goers who unwrap candy in crinkly paper during a live performance, and (from a 12-year-old boy) having his mother come in to sweep when he has the pieces of a building toy spread out on the floor. ==Current usage and examples==