creeker

English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

creek + -er, denoting someone who lives in such a rural place that he has no hometown or settlement but a nearby creek.

Noun

creeker (plural creekers)

  1. (Appalachia, derogatory) A poor rural person.
    • 2002 June 21, Scott DeRosier, Linda, Creeker: A Woman's Journey, Lexington, Kentucky, United States: The University Press of Kentucky, →ISBN:
      I want, at the outset to differentiate between those Appalachians who grow up in the towns and those from rural areas—the creeks and the hollers… This is a story from rural Appalachia, recently brought to consciousness, and reported by a creeker.
    • 2017 August 23, Kay, Trey, “Us & Them: 'You're Either a Hiller or a Creeker'”, in Us & Them (in English), Charleston, West Virginia, United States: West Virginia Public Broadcasting, retrieved 2020-07-27:
      But at my alma mater in West Virginia, we had a unique "Us & Them" sorting classification: you were either a “hiller” or a “creeker.”
Coordinate terms
  • hiller, the next highest socioeconomic class

Noun

creeker (plural creekers)

  1. Alternative form of krieker (pectoral sandpiper)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.