Rubberneck

Alice Faber faber at ALVIN.HASKINS.YALE.EDU
Fri Sep 8 18:21:37 UTC 2000


Laurence Horn wrote:
>>My sister (whose fieldwork on the "packy" question Larry Horn
>>recently resurrected) has raised a question about the term
>>"rubbernecking" ("causing a traffic jam by gawking at stuff, usually
>>an accident, off to the side, often in the opposite traffic lane").
>>This is a term that we're both quite familiar with, having grown up
>>in the New York suburbs. But her husband, who was raised in suburban
>>Washington, DC, professed not to have heard the term (and, in fact,
>>though it was idiosyncratic, family usage on our part). Since the "R"
>>issue of DARE isn't out, I thought I'd pose the question here, as a
>>Friday afternoon distraction: How widespread is the term, both in the
>>US and elsewhere in the English speaking world?
>>
>>Alice
>>--
>Interestingly, it doesn't seem to be in the OED.  This term (as
>either "rubbernecker" or "rubbernecking") is one I'm also familiar
>with from as far back as I can recall, but since I'm also from NYC &
>suburbs that doesn't add much.  But pace Alice, while rubberneckers
>can and often do CAUSE slowdowns, I'd argue that's not part of the
>definition of the term--if I slow down to gawk at an accident off to
>the side I'm a rubbernecker even if there's no one else on the road.
>Tobacco causes cancer too but the latter isn't part of the lexical
>entry (as opposed to the encyclopedia entry, perhaps) of the former.
>I know, picky, picky, but if we're not, who will be?

Agreed...would you believe that I was thinking in terms of traffic
reporters, who wouldn't have occasion to use the term in
circumstances where there was no slowdown? Nah...thought not. Oh
well. I'm always going to defer to Larry on matters semantic.

Alice
--
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Alice Faber                  new, improved email: faber at alvin.haskins.yale.edu
Haskins Laboratories            old email, if you must: faber at haskins.yale.edu
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