body snatcher
Appearance
See also: bodysnatcher and body-snatcher
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From body + snatcher. Later use highly influenced by the 1955 novel The Body Snatchers and its repeated adaptation into film, wherein aliens begin replacing humans with pod people.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]body snatcher (plural body snatchers)
- (slang, humorous, derogatory, obsolete) One who makes arrests, such as a bailiff or policeman.
- 1778 August 19, Public Advertiser:
- They proved to be two of those Body-Snatchers, called hired Constables, who were patrolling the Fields.
- 1877, R. Rae, Newport, section 40:
- Look here, my body-snatchers, you have unlawfully abridged the liberty of one of the sons of the sovereign State of New York!
- One who abducts or controls another's body, such as a slaver, psychic, or human resources agent.
- 1852, B.R. Hall, Frank Freeman's Barber Shop, xiv. 252:
- A black woman told Carrie not to say master and missis, because you were body-snatchers and slave-drivers.
- 1894 September, Harper's Magazine, 581/2:
- Girls who can't let a man go by without reaching out for him. That's what I call them—body snatchers.
- 1961 June, Fortune, 129/1:
- McCulloch had no compunction about using these executive recruiting firms. They were, he knew, often derisively called ‘body snatchers’, ‘head hunters’, ‘flesh peddlers’, and ‘pirates’.
- 1994 August 9, “Newswire”, in Associated Press:
- South claims hundreds abducted by North Korea's ‘body snatchers’.
- 2000, C. Golden, Head Games, section 166:
- ‘What are you looking at?’
‘An alien body snatcher who stole my partner and took her place.’
- (historical) One who sells cadavers to anatomists, surgeons, etc., especially by exhuming corpses from graves, a resurrection man.
- 1819, J. H. Vaux, “New Vocab. Flash Lang.”, in Memoirs:
- Body-snatcher, a stealer of dead bodies from churchyards; which are sold to the surgeons and students in anatomy.
- 1910, Encyclopædia Britannica, I. 937/2:
- So emboldened and careless did these body-snatchers become... that they no longer confined themselves to pauper graves.
- (in particular) A graverobber who steals bodies or body parts.
- 2008 March 19, Daily Record, Glasgow, section 9:
- The head of a ring of bodysnatchers who stole the bones of broadcaster Alistair Cooke pleaded guilty yesterday.
- (British, military, slang) A stretcher-bearer.
- 1951, Great Britain. Army. Royal Army Medical Corps, Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, volumes 96-97, J. Bale, Sons & Danielson, Limited, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 410:
- Freezing conditions in the hills make essential the quick evacuation of wounded, and their regimental mates are full of praise for the sterling job done by the cheerful, tireless “body-snatchers” of the Battalion.
Synonyms
[edit]- (alien) pod person
- (corpse-stealer) resurrection man, resurrectionist
Translations
[edit]One who secretly removes without right or authority a dead body from a grave
|
References
[edit]- Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed. "body snatcher, n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2010.
- “body-snatcher”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Categories:
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English multiword terms
- English slang
- English humorous terms
- English derogatory terms
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English terms with quotations
- English terms with historical senses
- British English
- en:Military
- en:People
- en:Law enforcement
- en:Occupations