woolly back

noun

Etymology

The Liverpool Echo suggests two possible origins for the term, both dating back to the early 1900s: * It may be a term for scab workers brought into the city from surrounding towns to manually load and unload ships in the Liverpool docks; unloading ships, the dockers would carry the woollen bales on their backs, leaving wool on their clothes. * It may be a term for men who delivered coal into Liverpool from mines surrounding the city, who wore sheep fleece to protect their backs. Another suggestion is that it could have originated in the Middle Ages from non-resident Welsh and English people trying to avoid the entry fee at the Chester city walls on market day by sneaking in the livestock entrance with a sheep on their back.

Definitions

  1. A non-Liverpudlian person who travels to Liverpool, especially to work at the docks.

  2. A person from the Merseyside area surrounding Liverpool such as Skelmersdale, Southport,…

    A person from the Merseyside area surrounding Liverpool such as Skelmersdale, Southport, Halton, and the Wirral.

  3. Any unsophisticated person from the countryside.

  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. A Welsh person.

    2. A New Zealander.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for woolly back. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA