backstreet
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See also: back street
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]backstreet (comparative more backstreet, superlative most backstreet)
- Associated with neighborhoods on back streets, often in older neighborhoods, with poorer residents.
- 1949, Sinclair Lewis, chapter 18, in The God-Seeker, New York: Popular Library, page 94:
- The agency was given to some deserving politician who, as he knew nothing at all about Indians and spoke no language except traces of back-street American, would not be prejudiced in Indian affairs and interfere with the highly informed traders.
- 1983, “Uptown Girl”, in Billy Joel (music), An Innocent Man:
- She's been living in her uptown world / I bet she's never had a backstreet guy / I bet her momma never told her why
- 1989, Carol Shields, “Times of Sickness and Health”, in The Collected Stories, Random House Canada, published 2004, page 349:
- They made these things for almost nothing, cutting them out of remnants they scrambled for in backstreet fabric outlets.
- (figuratively) Done in poor and unsanitary conditions, secretly and illegally; back-alley.
- 1965 June 15, Renée Short, Hansard:
- The results of self-induced and backstreet abortions come to our hospitals for the damage to be put right.
Further reading
[edit]- “backstreet abortion”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
- “backstreet”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- “backstreet” (US) / “backstreet” (UK) in Macmillan English Dictionary.
Noun
[edit]backstreet (plural backstreets)
- Alternative spelling of back street