Hoosier
See also: hoosier
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Uncertain. See Wikipedia's article on the subject for theories. Popularized by the 1830 John Finley poem “The Hoosier’s Nest”.[1]
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈhuʒɚ/
Noun
Hoosier (plural Hoosiers)
- A native or resident of the U.S. state of Indiana.
- Someone associated with Indiana University, for example as a student, alum, or sports team member, or as a fan. This is also the university's sports mascot.
- (slang, St. Louis, Missouri) An uneducated, tasteless white person.
- 2014, Emily Giffin, The Emily Giffin Collection: Volume 2: Baby Proof, →ISBN:
- "The mall? Belinda, mall pickups are for hoosiers," I say, St. Louis slang for white trash. "With femullets." [...] "But Jake's no hoosier."
- 2015, Pate McMichael, Klandestine: How a Klan Lawyer and a Checkbook Journalist ..., page 2:
- Taken as a whole, the article portrayed Ray as an indigent, racist “Hoosier” (St. Louis slang for redneck) with an inept, habitual tendency to commit petty crimes.
- (US, historical) A kind of cupboard or dresser with shelves, drawers, etc.; a kitchenet.
Synonyms
- (resident of Indiana): Indianan (exonym)
- (tasteless white person): white trash
Derived terms
Adjective
Hoosier (not comparable)
- Characteristic of or pertaining to the American state of Indiana.
- 1947, John Bartlow Martin, Indiana: An Interpretation, page xi:
- Less well known but perhaps even more interesting than Stephenson is Court Asher, the second "gentleman" from Indiana. Asher is a more convincing bigot than Stephenson, one more homegrown and more Hoosier than the puffed-up grand dragon, […]
- 2009, Alden Studebaker, Hoosieritis: The Contagious Condition That Is Indiana, page 51:
- That's not very Hoosier, is it?
- 2009, Alexander Lawrence, Blest Be the Tie, book 1:
- “Somehow the tradition doesn't seem very Hoosier.”
Synonyms
- (Indiana): Indianan (exonym)
Derived terms
References
- Mettler, Katie (2017 January 13) “‘Hoosier’ is now the official name for Indiana folk. But what does it even mean?”, in Washington Post, retrieved 2022-12-19
Further reading
- The Language of St. Louis, Missouri: (American United Studies XIII, Linguistics, Vol. 4) by Thomas Murray, 1986
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