drugstore cowboy
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]First use appears c. 1922 in the San Antonio Evening News. The second sense derives from soda fountains and ice cream counters as a once popular meeting spot in drugstores.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]drugstore cowboy (plural drugstore cowboys)
- (dated) Someone who dresses and acts like a cowboy but has none of the skills.
- Synonym: dude
- 1974, Film Heritage[1]:
- When we first came to California and we started putting on Westerns, there were no riders in Hollywood; they were all drugstore cowboys.
- [1989 May 29, “Who's a ‘Drugstore Cowboy’?”, in Newsweek, page 29:
- The Soviet Union, he [Marlin Fitzwater] insisted, was engaged “in a very strange pattern of public-relations gambits”; he compared Mikhail Gorbachev to a “drugstore cowboy,” an old-fashioned term for a pretentious impostor.]
- 1990, Kenny Rogers, “Introduction”, in Cowboy Tales: Western Classics from American Masters[2], Viking Studio Books, →ISBN:
- I was raised on Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, and as a kid I dreamed of doing the things real cowboys do—not drugstore cowboys or rodeo cowboys, but the real sweat-and-dirt variety—like roping and riding, herding cattle, and breaking horses.
- A young man who loafs around town, especially a lady's man who hangs out in public places in an attempt to pick up girls.
- 1934, James T. Farrell, chapter 21, in The Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan:
- When any of these jazz-age drugstore cowboys starts trying to fool around with his sister, he won't mince his words. He'll say, "See here, now, what do you mean, trying to ruin my sister?"
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “drugstore cowboy”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- “drugstore cowboy”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.