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

Noun

Hoosier (plural Hoosiers)

  1. A native or resident of the U.S. state of Indiana.
  2. 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.
  3. (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.
  4. (US, historical) A kind of cupboard or dresser with shelves, drawers, etc.; a kitchenet.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Adjective

Hoosier (not comparable)

  1. 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

Derived terms

References

  1. 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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