Croydon facelift
English
WOTD – 15 September 2015
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˌkɹɔɪdn̩ ˈfeɪslɪft/
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
Croydon facelift (plural Croydon facelifts)
- (British slang, derogatory) A women's hairstyle, associated with lower social classes, in which the hair is pulled tightly back from the face and fastened behind the head, thus pulling the features up and back and giving an effect similar to a facelift.
- 2010, Charlotte Madison, Dressed to Kill, unnumbered page:
- We climb in, and I plaster my Little House on the Prairie-style cloth hat over my hair so the greasy strands won't get yanked back into a Croydon facelift as I pull on my helmet.
- 2013 July 28, Elizabeth Day, The Observer:
- All of which could explain why, when I had my hair styled in a tight ponytail for the shoot accompanying this feature, most people who saw me thought I looked "unapproachable" (which might simply be a polite way of saying: "You looked like you had a rattail and a Croydon facelift").
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