yob
Translingual
Etymology
Clipping of English Yoba.
Symbol
yob
See also
- Wiktionary’s coverage of Yoba terms
English
WOTD – 2 August 2010
Etymology
Backslang for boy. The second sense was likely influenced by hobnob and/or yokel.
Pronunciation
- (UK) enPR: yŏb, IPA(key): /jɒb/
- (US) enPR: yŏb, IPA(key): /jɑb/
Audio (General Australian): (file) Audio (UK): (file) - Rhymes: -ɒb
Noun
yob (plural yobs)
- (obsolete, costermongers, back slang) A boy.
- 1897, A. R. Marshall, Pomes[sic] from the Pink 'Un, page 76:
- And you bet that each gal, not to mention each yob,
Didn't care how much ooftish it cost 'em per nob.
- 2010, Paul R. Wilson, The Birthday of Eternity, page 209:
- As we left the cemetery, I heard an elderly gravedigger muttering back slang to himself before Lucien's headstone. "Bloody shame, ain't it? Doubt the yob did much living by eighteen."
I corrected the man, saying, “No fear, that yob did plenty of living.”
- (derogatory, chiefly UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, slang) A person who engages in antisocial behaviour or drunkenness.
- 2005 January 10, Melissa Jackson, “Music to deter yobs by”, in BBC News[1]:
- 2009 August 8, Janet Daley, “The real reason for all those louts on holiday”, in The Telegraph[2]:
- Yes, it's holiday time again for British yobs – and the rest of us can flee to those parts of Abroad which the louts ignore, or just cringe in shame at home.
- 2017 March 27, Keiran Southern, “'We could have been killed': Fury at yobs who bricked windscreen with baby girl in car”, in Chronicle Live[3], retrieved 28 March 2017:
- But while doing 70mph on the A1, a hooded yob threw rock[sic – meaning a rock] from a grass verge onto the windscreen of the family’s Jeep, causing it to swerve.
- 2022 November 2, Paul Bigland, “New trains, old trains, and splendid scenery”, in RAIL, number 969, page 57:
- Three local yobs have also joined, but they have not reckoned on a redoubtable Conductor and two local revenue protection officers who soon escort them off the train!
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
- (boy): elrig (“girl”)
Translations
antisocial person
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