creeper

Joel S. Berson Berson at ATT.NET
Fri Mar 12 15:49:45 UTC 2010


I heard "creep" around 1980-1985 (Boston area), used by one software
programmer to refer to another when they were feuding over how to
implement something and each was removing the other's code
overnight.  My impression at the time was that the association was
with sneaky behavior.  But there were other "odd" (not mainstream)
personal characteristics or behavior that could have been the prompt
for the term.  In any case, it was not stalking persons of the opposite gender.

Joel

At 3/12/2010 10:01 AM, Gordon, Matthew J. wrote:
>I don't believe I use 'creeper' but my sense is that it's not
>synonymous with 'creep' for its users. My definition of 'creep' is
>much broader than the one you provided. A 'creep' is more of a
>general pejorative, not a term just for someone who's creepy. It's
>much closer to 'jerk' for me, but then I don't think I've used
>'creep' in years. If my sense of 'creep' is widespread, then the
>development of 'creeper' might be seen as motivated by the semantic
>gap left to describe a creepy person, especially a sexual predator.
>
>-Matt Gordon
>
>
>On 3/12/10 7:43 AM, "Amy West" <medievalist at W-STS.COM> wrote:
>
>I've been noticing a term that my kids here in Worcester and their
>cohorts (13 and 10 years old respectively) have been using and also
>spotted in one of my student's (18-year-old freshman) papers:
>
>They use "creeper" to mean what I would call a "creep," as in a
>creepy, scary, or shady person. "He's a creeper."
>
>I have not done my due diligence to see how widespread this is. It's
>just a productive use of the -er ending to form a noun from a verb.
>For them a "creeper" is someone who "creeps" around, skulking around.
>There's a sense of menace in their use of "creeper" (and frankly in
>my own use of "creep") that isn't captured by MW C11's definition of
>"creep" (n) as "an unpleasant or obnoxious person."
>
>[The context where I first learned the use: I was pointing out
>someone at an SF con who I wanted them to avoid because he has
>sexually harassed young women. "Oh, he's a creeper" was their
>response, meaning if I had just said "Avoid that guy: he's a creeper"
>I could have been more direct.]
>
>---Amy West
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>
>------------------------------------------------------------
>The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org



More information about the Ads-l mailing list