drawcansir means A blustering, bullying person; a braggart. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
drawcansir is pronounced /dɹɔːˈkansə/.
Why “drawcansir” is a great word
DRAWCANSIR — [Noun] A person who combines boastful, theatrical swagger with bullying aggression. From Drawcansir, a character in George Villiers' play The Rehearsal (1671), whose name is a parody of Almanzor, a hero in John Dryden's The Conquest of Granada. Unlike a braggart, whose sin is primarily empty boasting, or a bully, a general intimidator of the weak, a drawcansir is a performer of menace, whose cruelty is inseparable from his need for an audience. He is the bluster in a crowded tavern, the needless challenge issued for dramatic effect, the petty tyrant who rules his small domain as if it were a stage—a caricature of violence, all sound and fury, signifying nothing but its own fragile vanity.
noun
- A blustering, bullying person; a braggart.“Drawcansir Dolben would destroy / Both slavery and licentious joy; / Foe to all sorts of planters, he / Will suffer neither bond nor free.”