Several words have become part of the language in being used in phrases. Last time we looked at ‘black’ and now look at ‘pink’.
Pink slip is a North American reference to dismissal from employment. First seen in 1915, sometimes the reference was to a signature from the employee stating they would leave the union.
Pink elephants are apparently an hallucination for those suffering a little too much to drink. The reference is first seen in 1913, when it appeared in Jack London’s John Barleycorn.
Pink eye is a contagious eye infection first named in 1882. Earlier, from 1570, it referred to a small eye.
Pink collar – if clerical jobs are white collar, and manual workers are described as blue collar, it is not hard to work out those jobs usually performed by or associated with women are pink collar jobs. This reference is first seen in 1977.
Nobody was tickled pink until 1909, although ‘tickled’ had been used to mean ‘pleased’ since 1580.
In the pink today means ‘in the best of health’ and has done since 1720. However there is an earlier reference from 1597, when someone called William Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet when Mercurio spoke of himself as “Why, I am the very pinke of curesie” which was a reference to the acme, pinnacle, the best, rather than just to health.
Strike me pink is an expression of surprise attributed to the Australian vaudeville character Roy Rene around 1903. He would also use ‘strike me lucky’, ‘strike me….’ Well just about anything to get a laugh.
See pink spiders is used the same as pink elephants, but also used to refer to the hallucinations associated with withdrawal symptoms. The Pink Spiders was also the name of a band debuting in 2005.
Pink tax is a phrase from the USA in the 1990s when the Gender Tax Repeal Act of 1995 prohibited price discrimination meaning women did not pay more for goods.
Shrink it and pink it is a reference to a previous ploy by advertisers to make clothing more appealing to women, tactics such as relabelling a size 10 as a size 8.
Pink wave is a reference, chiefly in the USA, to a period seeing an abundance of female candidates for political office.
Pink slime is finely textured or ground meat – the phrase coined to question the quality of the product.
The pink dollar was first used in the 1990s in the USA to describe the spending potential of gay people in retail outlets.
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