Mansonite

English

Etymology

Manson + -ite

Noun

Mansonite (plural Mansonites)

  1. A follower of Charles Manson (born 1934), American leader of a cult-like criminal group in the 1960s.
    • 1977, Alexander Walker, Double takes: notes and afterthoughts on the movies, 1956-76:
      The glib interpretations offered — the Mansonites were all people with grudges against society: he had, like Hitler, an incomplete personality []
  2. A fan of controversial American rock musician Marilyn Manson (Brian Warner, born 1969).
    • 1994 September, SPIN, volume 10, number 6:
      Today's wet-behind-the-ears Mansonites are fueled by the spirit of betrayal, the sense that somewhere along the line the Woodstock generation copped out.
    • 2006, Bhesham R. Sharma, The death of art:
      By the end, she has become a Mansonite Goth.
    • 2007, Raven Digitalis, Goth Craft: The Magickal Side of Dark Culture:
      For most Mansonites, Goth is only a phase, and their fashion and outlook on life change alongside Marilyn Manson's.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.