Slacker

Slacker

The term slacker is commonly used to refer to a person who avoids work, or (primarily in North American English) an educated person who is antimaterialistic and viewed as an underachiever.cite web |url=http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/slacker |title=slacker |publisher=Random House, Inc. |year=2006] [cite web |url=http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/slacker?view=get |title=slacker |author=Compact Oxford English Dictionary] Slackers are also known as loakes.

While use of the term "slacker" for one who shirks work dates back to about 1790 or 1898 depending on the source, it achieved a boost in popularity after its use in the films Back to the Future and Richard Linklater's " Slacker". [cite web |url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=slacker&searchmode=none |title=Online Etymology Dictionary, slack (adj.) |publisher=Douglas Harper]

A "slacker" may also be a person who is in fact suffering from depression. The person may have suffered from psychological trauma that has resulted in their lack of motivation. For example, post traumatic stress disorder commonly causes individuals to behave as "slackers". For the depressed individual, correct identification of the reasons behind their behaviour is the first step to them seeking treatment and recovering.

ee also

*Bludger
*The Idler (1993)
*Generation X
*NEET: "Not currently engaged in Employment, Education or Training".
*Procrastination
*Slack
*Slacker Radio
*Sloth
*Depression
*Grunge
*Post traumatic stress disorder

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Slacker — (englisch, von slack, „lustlos“, „schlaff“) ist eine Bezeichnung für eine Person, deren Lebensart durch geringe Leistungs und Anpassungsbereitschaft in Schule oder Beruf gekennzeichnet ist. Ursprünglich wurde der Begriff in den USA für Personen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • slacker — UK US /ˈslækər/ noun [C] ► someone who does not work hard enough or put enough effort into something: »The management where I work thinks that taking time to eat lunch is only for slackers …   Financial and business terms

  • slacker — (n.) popularized 1994, but meaning person who shirks work dates back to 1898; agent noun from SLACK (Cf. slack) (v.) …   Etymology dictionary

  • slacker — [n] shirker avoider, bum, deadbeat*, goldbrick, good for nothing, goof off*, idler, loafer, quitter, slouch; concepts 412,423 …   New thesaurus

  • slacker — ► NOUN informal 1) a person who avoids work or effort. 2) chiefly N. Amer. a young person of a subculture characterized by apathy and aimlessness …   English terms dictionary

  • slacker — [slak′ər] n. 1. a person who shirks work or duty 2. a person who evades military service in wartime ☆ 3. Informal a young person, typically in his or her twenties, variously regarded as indolent, unambitious, alienated, apathetic, etc …   English World dictionary

  • Slacker — Sla|cker [ slækɐ ], der; s, [engl. slacker, zu slack = nachlässig, schlampig; verbummelt, verw. mit lat. laxus, ↑ lax] (Jargon): Jugendlicher od. junger Erwachsener, der das Streben nach [beruflichem] Erfolg ablehnt u. die Lebenshaltung eines… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • slacker — [[t]slæ̱kə(r)[/t]] slackers N COUNT (disapproval) If you describe someone as a slacker, you mean that they are lazy and do less work than they should. He s not a slacker, he s the best worker they ve got …   English dictionary

  • slacker — UK [ˈslækə(r)] / US [ˈslækər] noun [countable] Word forms slacker : singular slacker plural slackers informal someone who tries to avoid working …   English dictionary

  • slacker — n. someone who is lazy or who never completes a task or who fails at a task. (Standard English, but currently used as if it were recently invented.) □ Micky is a slacker and a real jerk. □ Don’t be such a big ass slacker! …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

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