Chelsea tractor
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Chelsea, a wealthy area of London in which this type of vehicle is popular, and tractor, an ironic allusion to a large, off-road vehicle, as a humorous juxtaposition between the vehicle's size and power and its use on low-speed roads in a city environment. Potentially also an allusion to their reputation for causing unnecessary traffic congestion, due to their unsuitability for small roads, in a similar fashion to tailbacks caused by tractors on rural roads.
Noun
[edit]Chelsea tractor (plural Chelsea tractors)
- (UK, colloquial, derogatory) An SUV or 4x4 vehicle which is chiefly driven on urban or suburban roads for light duties, such as taking children to school. [from 20th c.]
- 2011, Ben Aaronovitch, Rivers of London, Gollancz, published 2011, page 45:
- This far up the hill was a maze of narrow streets choked with BMWs and Chelsea Tractors.
- 2023 November 5, Andrew Anthony, “Monsters of the road: what should the UK do about SUVs?”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
- As Simms and Murray note: “The part of the UK where the largest and most powerful 4x4s – so-called Chelsea tractors – are most popular is indeed the inner London borough of Kensington and Chelsea.”