Blondin

See also: blondin

English

Etymology

From French Blondin. The noun is after the French tightrope walker Charles Blondin (1824–1897).

Proper noun

Blondin (plural Blondins)

  1. A surname from French.

Translations

Statistics

  • According to the 2010 United States Census, Blondin is the 21535th most common surname in the United States, belonging to 1212 individuals. Blondin is most common among White (89.6%) individuals.

Noun

Blondin (plural Blondins)

  1. (idiomatic) An expert tightrope walker.
    • 1899 November 1, R[ichard] B[owyer] Smith, quotee, “Wheatgrowing in South Australia”, in A[lexander] J[enyns] Boyd, editor, The Queensland Agricultural Journal, [], volume V, Brisbane, Qld.: Edmund Gregory, [], →ISSN, →OCLC, page 457:
      My invention has cost me some money, some anxiety, and condemned my little ones to all the miseries of poverty and banishment in the bush, whereas if I had been a successful cricketer, a good bowler, or a rifle shooter without pluck, a Blondin, or an acrobat, I and mine would have escaped these ills.
    • 1938, Frank S[ydney] Smythe, “The Mana Peak: The Reconnaissance”, in The Valley of Flowers, uniform edition, London: Hodder and Stoughton Limited, published 1947, →OCLC, pages 220–221:
      A step or two upwards, then one to the right, and my exploring hand was able to touch a small, sloping, scree-covered ledge. This was covered by a film of ice, which I cleared as well as I could with one hand while supporting myself with the other. Having at last decided that a step was justifiable, I balanced up with the delicacy, but scarcely the grace, of a Blondin and a moment later was on the ledge.
    • 2013, Philip Howard, “What is the correct term?”, in Modern Manners: The Essential Guide to Correct Behaviour and Etiquette, London: The Robson Press, →ISBN, page 273:
      A daily newspaper is a great lake in which intellectual elephants can swim and lambs can paddle. Accordingly, the columnist is a Blondin, treading a tightrope over Victoria Falls between obscurity and triviality, condescension and ostentation, and often falling into the foaming minestrone.
    • 2015, Jeremy Kingston, “The Nubile Bachelor”, in Sherlock Holmes and a Scandal in Batavia [], London: Robert Hale, →ISBN, page 79:
      But the several schemes that I imagined for passing a message from the train were so doubtful of success, or required the sure-footedness of a Blondin, that I discarded each of them in turn.
  2. Alternative letter-case form of blondin.
    • 1997, Jim Perrin, “Heartland”, in Visions of Snowdonia: Landscape and Legend, London: BBC Books, →ISBN, page 130:
      Incised with painstaking delicacy and strength of vision into the single slab are four scenes: quarry rock-men in a pit with a Blondin (a carrying-cradle running on wire cables) above them; []
    • 2001, Margaret Aitken, chapter 4, in In My Small Corner: Memories of an Orkney Childhood, Dalkeith, Midlothian: Scottish Cultural Press, →ISBN, page 38:
      Thousands and thousands of steel-mesh bags were filled with boulders, swung into place by a Blondin and dumped one by one into the water until the channel was blocked.
    • 2012, James Crawford, “Lowlands”, in Scotland’s Landscapes (The National Collection of Aerial Photography), Edinburgh: Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, →ISBN, page 144:
      Once material arrived at the Lodge, it was shipped to the site by means of a ‘Blondin’ – an overhead ropeway named after the famous Frenchman Charles Blondin, who crossed Niagara Falls on a tightrope in 1859.
    • 2015, David Astle, “Why is Blondin like a prizefighter?”, in Riddledom: 101 Riddles and Their Stories, Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, →ISBN, “Famous & Forgettable” section, page 229:
      There have been stage plays and songs about the French funambulist, street names, and a Welsh device dubbed a Blondin that carries rocks along a cable.
    • 2016, Kellan Macinnes, “The Grave in the Woods”, in The Making of Mickey Bell, Dingwall, Highland: Sandstone Press, →ISBN, page 226:
      [T]he marshy ground is imprinted with the pattern of long gone railway sleepers. A stump of concrete stands high on the hillside. The remains of a Blondin, a cable lift once used to haul stone and rubble and spoil across the river.

Further reading

French

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Proper noun

Blondin ?

  1. a surname, Blondin

Descendants

  • English: Blondin