单词 | hippie |
释义 | hippien.adj. slang (originally U.S.). A. n. 1. A person who is hip (hip adj. 1); one who is in the know, esp. about jazz music and culture; a hipster, a hepcat. Now rare or merged with sense A. 2.Often used depreciatively to denote a person who regards himself or herself as hip. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > music appreciation > music lover > [noun] > of jazz jazzbo1917 jazzer1917 jazzophile1926 cat1932 alligator1936 hepcat1937 hipcat1937 jitterbug1937 hepster1938 hipster1938 hippie1948 1948 Billboard 11 Dec. 18/3 Drawing everything from Betty (Legs) Henderson to a group of assorted hippies, the Clique Club, new Broadway jazz bistro, made its debut this week. 1953 D. Wallop Night Light 157 Man, I really get a bellyful of these would be hippies. 1966 W. Manus Mott the Hoople v. 64 Chuckling loudly, Leroy went off, diddledybopping along like the Harlem hippie he once was. 1968 Down Beat 7 Mar. 19/3 He was more than mildly concerned about whether the cats had caught up with him... At that time, all the hippies hung out in..Nightsie Johnson's joint..on 131st Street in Harlam. 2. A member of a countercultural movement which began in the late 1960s, characterized by pacifism, rejection of conservative values, and a nonconformist appearance (typically with long hair, jeans, beads, etc.), and often associated with the taking of hallucinogenic drugs. More generally: any person who adopts a similarly unconventional style of dress, or embraces alternative ideals and beliefs and a nonconformist way of life. Now sometimes depreciative.See also neo-hippie n., techno-hippie n. at techno- comb. form 2a. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [noun] > specific fashions > follower of specific fashion moon child1923 bodgie1949 Ted1956 teddy1956 neatnik1959 mod1960 rocker1963 longhair1964 yé-yé1964 sharpie1965 hippie1966 punk1976 neo-hippie1980 New Romantic1980 society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > separation or isolation > [noun] > one who is separated or isolated > one outside conventional society beard1667 come-outer1840 pagan1841 Bohemian1843 Greenwich Villager1887 weirdie1894 outsider1907 white nigger1934 beardo1935 isolate1942 weirdo1955 beat1958 beatnik1958 boho1958 beatster1959 way out1959 hippie1966 rebetis1966 homeboy1967 peanut1968 Yippie1968 suedehead1970 Goth1986 grebo1987 hipster1989 1966 W. R. Young & J. R. Hixson LSD on Campus i. 8 The poundage of LSD swallowed by college ‘hippies’ is..a minuscule amount. 1966 R. Goldstein 1 in 7: Drugs on Campus 73 Ah, the Harvard hippie... He defies his parents by sleeping with his girl friend, his neighbors by letting his hair grow, and his university by smoking pot. 1967 Spectator 7 July 32/3 Promises that in future they will live in accordance with the principles of love demanded by the hippies. 1972 New Society 30 Nov. 496/2 The word ‘hippy’ is now in current usage throughout Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya, and often just refers to anyone with long hair, almost always a European. 1989 ‘C. Roman’ Foreplay ix. 94 The street is peopled with ragamuffined hippies hawking social revolution. 1997 Neon May 8/1 Brought up by a load of hippies at an alternative school, Croghan was encouraged to do or say anything at any time. 2016 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 6 Nov. 19 The self-engrossed hippies of Nimbin can reject modern medicine and die medieval deaths if they want. B. adj. (chiefly attributive). Of, belonging to, or relating to a hippie or hippies; characteristic of or like a hippie (in either sense of the noun), esp. in being unconventional or nonconformist. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > separation or isolation > [adjective] > outside conventional society Bohemian1846 Bohemic1874 Greenwich Village1919 boho1958 hippie1959 outsiderish1959 outsiderly1959 beatniky1964 long-haired1964 neo-hippie1980 1959 Village Voice (N.Y.) 18 Nov. 13 Imagine coming on so jaded,..so hippie,..and fed up. 1967 Guardian 12 July 1/7 Have you ever been to the hippie district [of San Francisco]? 1967 New Statesman 27 Oct. 531/3 The [demonstration] marches cannot end the war, whether they are moderate and middle-class, insurrectionist, hippy or whatever. 1968 Jrnl. Human Health & Social Behavior 9 156 A..tension within the hippie subculture between contemplative..forms of ‘mind-expansion’ and more hedonistically oriented forms of sensual excess. 1977 ‘J. le Carré’ Honourable Schoolboy i. xii. 273 ‘And where, please, is the un-named narcotics agent.’.. ‘Shacked up in a hippy commune north of Katmandu.’ 1989 E. Gilchrist Light can be both Wave & Particle 151 The first hippie love-in ever held in New Orleans. 1993 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) (Nexis) 28 Oct. (Fashion section) 38 The hippy look for junior fashion funkstersis all the rage in Paris. 2015 E. Wood My Secret Rockstar Boyfriend 225 They [sc. tepees] are for..the seriously rich—who still want to feel like they're living the hippie festival dream, but with all the luxuries of a five-star resort. Compounds (In sense A. 2.) hippie chic n. a style of clothing or fashion design reflecting that characteristic of or associated with hippies. ΚΠ 1976 E. E. Baskett Entrapped iii. 29 Dressed in the most tattered rags I had ever seen (not ‘hippie chic’; I mean real rags), as bad as one encounters on skid row. 1996 Guardian 7 Mar. a10 (heading) Sally Brampton reports on a revitalised mix from the inventors of hippy chic. 2002 Bliss June 26/2 What fashion trends [are] in at the moment—hippy chic or rock chick? hippie chick n. a female hippy; a woman or girl who dresses in a style reminiscent of a hippy. ΚΠ 1967 Chicago Daily Defender 12 Aug. 17/1 The hippie chick he went out with t'other evening copped his wallet. 1989 Gettysburg (Pa.) Times 18 Mar. 4 a/4 Middle-aged women still dressed like hippy chicks. 2005 Birmingham Post (Nexis) 5 Oct. 2 Hippy chicks sad at having to pack away their gypsy skirts until the next boho revival will be cheered up by Paul Smith's Floral. hippieland n. a place where hippies live; the realm, community, or world of hippies; cf. hippiedom n. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social relations > lack of social communication or relations > separation or isolation > [noun] > one who is separated or isolated > one outside conventional society > way of life, condition, or domain of vie de Bohème1888 beatness1951 outsiderishness1956 outsiderliness1957 outsiderdom1958 outsiderhood1958 outsiderism1958 outsiderness1961 flower power1967 hippiedom1967 hippieland1967 boho1979 1967 San Antonio (Texas) Express 6 Mar. 4 a/1 I..went out and parked on Haight Street the other day. The heart of Hippieland in San Francisco. 1967 Economist 15 July 217/2 Some of the music is attracting attention outside of hippieland. 1970 K. Platt Pushbutton Butterfly (1971) iv. 41 A lot of girls disappear in hippieland. 2002 Austral. Financial Rev. (Sydney) 19 Apr. 81/4 A safe, easy road..will turn Byron [Bay] into a theme park.., a quick trip down to Hippieland. hippie-style adj. (a) adj. of a style characteristic of or associated with hippies; (b) adv.in the manner of a hippy or hippies; like a hippie. ΚΠ 1967 N.Y. Times 26 Sept. 55/1 Her observations of hippie-style extremists of the high school generation. 1989 C. Fuentes & A. MacAdam tr. C. Fuentes Christopher Unborn (1990) ii. i. 50 She in Tehuana clothes, me hippie-style. 1990 J. Stern & M. Stern Sixties People Introd. 3 Walking our dog, who sported a hippie-style bandanna around his neck. 1999 Sunday Tel. (Sydney) (Nexis) 14 Mar. 182 She began art school and lived hippy-style in a van. 2002 M. Kort Soul Picnic x. 124 She added, in a hippie-style sentiment of the times, ‘Men are beautiful, you know.’ hippie trail n. a travel route popular with hippies; spec. an overland route from Europe to South-East Asia, typically taking in Turkey, Pakistan, Nepal, and India, favoured by young travellers especially in the 1960s and early 1970s, as an alternative to conventional tourism. ΚΠ 1968 Times of India 12 Dec. 10 Those who complain that the police in Delhi seem to be taking an undue..interest in the doings of the capital's floating population of hippies might..take a look at the way other police forces along the ‘hippie trail’, all the way from Yugoslavia to Nepal, have reacted to this new class of ‘tourists’ from Europe. 1993 J. Green It: Sex since Sixties 314 I left school..in 1969 and did a trip out to India. I did the hippie trail, though I did it in a slightly different way to most hippies. 2012 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 22 Jan. (Styles section) 7/2 So how did a former stop on a low-budget hippie trail become a magnet for Seventh Avenue materialists? hippy-dippy n. and adj. (also hippie-dippie, hippie-dippy) (a) n. depreciative a hippie; (b) adj. of or relating to a hippie; characteristic of a hippie, esp. vague and unconsidered or foolishly idealistic (cf. dippy adj.). ΚΠ 1959 F. L. Brown Trumbull Park xxxvii. 376 ‘Oh, he's a real hippy-dippy all right’... I know that what she really meant was: Oh, he's a real fool all right! 1963 N.Y. Times 4 Apr. 25 (advt.) Watch the kids cut loose in the Hully Gully and all the other hippy-dippy dances. 1993 Q Jan. 70/5 Despite her hippy-dippy reputation, discipline seems to be the key to her success. 2007 Grazia 9 July 115/3 A lovely hippy-dippy floral knee-length smock dress by Jovovich–Hawk. 2012 K. Sylvester Neil Flambé & Marco Polo Murders 37 His skin usually crawled at the sight of all the hippie-dippies, with their lattes and their hemp headscarves and their facial hair. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.adj.1948 |
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