Noun
cake-eater (plural cake-eaters)
- (US slang, dated, usually endearing) A well-off person who indulges himself or herself; a playboy or playgirl.
1934, James T. Farrell, chapter 21, in The Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan:And you fellows, if you find some cake-eaters trying to take advantage of your sister, what are you going to do?
1956, Joseph Caruso, The Priest, →ISBN, page 158:"Nowadays, these cake-eaters all died young. They had no teeth. They all went to doctors who fixed teeth. But still they died young and without their teeth."
2004, Zac Unger, Working Fire: The Making of an Accidental Fireman, page 8:"'... We got us a cake eater, right here at the sink!' He turned to me. 'Have you ever had your hands dirty, new kid?'"
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see cake, eater.
1965, Chaim Bermant, Berl Make Tea, Chapman and Hall, page 12:If ever there was a birthday in the home she would bake a special cake for the occasion, with the result that very few of our inmates lasted for more than a year. I myself am no great cake-eater, and I made a special point of keeping my birthday secret.