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New Yorkian
別の表記
- New-Yorkian (まれに)
- Newyorkian (まれに)
形容詞
New Yorkian (comparative more New Yorkian, superlative most New Yorkian)
- Of or relating to New York.
- 1853 March 5, Charles G[odfrey] Leland, “The Sadness of Rome---and Other Cities”, in The Pen and Pencil. A Weekly Journal of Literature, Science, Art and News., volume I, number X, Cincinnati, Oh., pages 303–304, columns 2–1:
- There is the Paris sadness, which is that of satiety and reaction, and the Viennese, which is that of Strauss. / There is the Bostonian, which is commercial literary; and the New Yorkian, which is blague commercial—yet no bad spirit withal—and the Philadelphian, which is peculiar in being without a peculiarity, which moveth silently, divineth unutterable things within itself, and behaveth decently,—a very commeil faut sort of sadness! / These are the varieties of sadness, pertaining to each city.
- 1855, Charles G[odfrey] Leland, “The Sadness of Rome and of other Cities”, in Meister Karl’s Sketch-Book, Philadelphia: Parry & McMillan, […], page 69:
- Also the Parisian sadness, which is that of satiety and reaction; and the Viennese, which is that of Strauss. / There is the Bostonian, which is commercio-literary; and the New Yorkian, which is faro-commercial, inspired with or “Sass and Brass,” and steamed up with enterprise, deviltry, fun, humbug, and go-aheaditiveness; and the Philadelphian, which advanceth also, but with a more measured tread—which is peculiar in being without a peculiarity, which moveth silently, divineth unutterable things within itself, and behaveth decently—a very comme-il-faut sort of sadness, which presenteth many solid points of social comfort. / These are the varieties of sadness pertaining to each city.
- 1876, Emma [Shields] Nunemacher Carleton, quoted in Kate Milner Rabb, “A Hoosier Listening Post”, in The Indianapolis Star: Greatest Morning and Sunday Circulation in Indiana, volume 32, number 261, Indianapolis, Ind., 21 February 1935, page 8, column 7:
- “We hope the competition will exist pro bono publico,” continues Mrs. Carleton. “The omnibus line is well patronized and a ride in one of those vehicles is certainly an enjoyable novelty; the very act of climbing into one seems citified and New Yorkian, and pulling the strap and poking 5 cents through the little round hole in the roof is a treat indeed. […]”
- 1876 September 22, “Broadway Breezes. Two Hundred Thousand Visitors. Thronged Hotels, Crowded Steamers, Railroads and Ferryboats.”, in The New York Herald, number 14,641, New York, N.Y., page 4, column 5:
- Broadway is / the typical street of america, / the typical street of the whole world. The current of the world’s life surges through it to-day. Only a short half generation ago it was entirely American, or, more properly speaking, it was, to coin a word, New Yorkian. In these early autumn days the men we see upon it, the men who have contributed to make it what it is, who control its politics, who lead its Bar, who preside over its literature and art, who write its ledgers and keep the record of its great accounts in trade and commerce with all the countries of the world, are in outward appearance an entirely different people from those of fifteen years ago.
- 1881 July, “Va Meeting Meeting of Am. Institute of M. Eng’rs”, in Jed[ediah] Hotchkiss, editor, The Virginias. A Mining, Industrial and Scientific Journal: Devoted to the Development of Virginia and West Virginia, volume II, number 7, Staunton, Va., pages 106–107, columns 2–1:
- Yes, Virginians have had ores and iron which were from Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and many other states, but, thank the spirit of progress and the good star of the regenerated Virginia that now you are going to use not Pennsylvanian, New Yorkian, New Jerseyian, but among others your-own-ian.
- 1891 May 23, W. N. L., “Recent Architecture in Philadelphia”, in H[enry] H[eathcote] Statham, editor, The Builder: An Illustrated Weekly Magazine for the Architect, Engineer, Archæologist, Constructor, Sanitary Reformer, and Art-Lover, volume LX, number 2520, page 414, column 1:
- A bank building having several stories of offices above the ground floor used for banking purposes was considered as offering too many facilities to burglars, and lofty buildings in general were stigmatised as “New Yorkian,” and therefore abhorred of all true Philadelphians.
- 1895 December, “Book Notices”, in The Bachelor of Arts: A Monthly Magazine Devoted to University Interests and General Literature, volume II, number 1, page 139:
- 1901 June 26, [Dramatic and musical criticisms][1], column 2:
- To [Charles Godfrey] Leland the Bostonian sadness was “commercio-literary,” the New Yorkian was “faro-commercial,” while the Philadelphian was “peculiar in being without a peculiarity;” it moved silently, divined unutterable things within itself, behaved decently—“a very comme-il-faut sort of sadness, which presenteth many solid points of social comfort.” [See 1855 quotation.]
- 1907, Papers and Addresses of the Lebanon County Historical Society, page 443:
- The guileless women were helpless for they could not disprove these claims, and many of them appeared to be very glad for the rare opportunity of purchasing what had been brought from such distant and mysterious countries, and thus be able to eat and wear the same things as their more favoured Philadelphian, New Yorkian and Parisian sisters!
- 1908 April 16, “A Few Lines on the “Big Burg””, in The Los Angeles Record, volume XX, number 9281, Los Angeles, Calif., page 4, column 1:
- The editor of perhaps the most widely read magazine issuing from the metropolis was recently asked, “Is your magazine read much in New York city itself?” / “Oh, yes,” he answered, “but we are more popular in the United States.” The answer was indicative. New York is not American. It is merely New Yorkian. And the New Yorker is beginning to know it and to regret it.
- 1912, B[essie] Pullen-Burry, “The hotel at Banff—Alpine Club—Mountain scenery—The Great Divide—Lake Emerald—Nervousness—The Yoho Valley”, in From Halifax to Vancouver, London: Mills and Boon, Limited, […], part II, page 308:
- Presumably, Wall Street accounts for the ultra-nervous condition of some of the New Yorkian middle-aged men.
- 1912 June 2, Oliver Madox Hueffer, “Do New Yorkers Maintain “the Highest Ideals of Street Manners”?: Oliver Madox Hueffer, the English Novelist, Gives His Impressions of What He Calls “The Kindly City.””, in The New York Times, volume LXI, number 19,853, part five, New York, N.Y., page 33, column 4:
- 1920, E. Virginia Smith, “Spring, Spring, Ineffable Spring!”, in The Crucible, Annville, Pa.: Lebanon Valley College, page 3:
- “And are you a relative of Mrs. Mac Allister of this church,” he asked in confused wonder. / “Well, rather distantly related, I suppose,” was the answer, and with a mischievous glance, “I’m her only daughter.” Her blue eyes looked innocently into his dark ones. “You can’t possibly belong to the Ellsworths who live next door to me?” / “Not at all, was Bob’s prompt reply, “I’m their only son. I say, Miss Meredith, that’s a nice joke to play on an old friend of yours!” / “Really, Bob, your New Yorkian omniscience is overwhelming at times. Now if your legal mind can’t comprehend that, run along and have Grace help you look it up in the dictionary, I’m busy.”
- 1928 October 13, The Saturday Review of Literature, page 261, column 4:
- Arthur Carlson, New Yorkian Specialist, 503 Fifth Avenue, New York.
- 1942 January 19, Dale Harrison, “Dale Harrison’s New York”, in The Scranton Times, number 16, Scranton, Pa., page 5, column 3:
- One frequently hears the remark: “I’d like to get out of New York,” but those who do move away invariably become disgruntled and unhappy. They long for the things New York has which are peculiarly New Yorkian — things that are difficult to put a finger on, like the lights, the gayety, the bustle, the noise, even the city’s smell.
- 1947, Reports from C.R.B. Belgian and American Advanced Fellows, Graduate Fellows, Special Fellows in the United States and Belgium, page 1:
- The feeling of heavy competition, which is present everywhere, subjects every individual living in it to a continuous mental stress, stimulating but exhausting. This very specific New Yorkian atmosphere produces the individualistic and isolated attitude of its inhabitants. For a foreign student, it seems then particularly difficult, and practically impossible to have a more intimate contact with New York families, as a way to get an insight in the American way of life.
- 1951, Edward Chace Tolman, “A Stimulus-expectancy Need-cathexis Psychology”, in Collected Papers in Psychology, Berkeley and Los Angeles, Calif.: University of California Press, page 231:
- Common sense undoubtedly would point out that some New Yorkers seem to be generally bright (successful) re all things New Yorkian, whereas others seem to be generally dumb (unsuccessful) re most things New Yorkian.
- 1973 March 8, “Lindsay Bows Out: ‘Eight Years Long Enough’ as N.Y.C. Mayor”, in The York Dispatch, volume 195, number 85, York, Pa., page 1, column 7:
- John Vliet Lindsay, saying that “eight years is too short a time but it is long enough for one man,” announced that he would not seek re-election as mayor of New York City this year. / But in true Byzantine-New Yorkian fashion, many of the city’s politicians did not believe him, even though Lindsay said his decision “is based on personal considerations and is final.”
- 1975 December 15, William Fripp, “It was a Great Society reunion”, in The Boston Globe, volume 208, number 168, Boston, Mass., page 17, column 4:
- The celebration was, as one New York visitor commented, “New Yorkian style, Washington in power, and Boston brains, but most of all it was fun and friends.”
- 1975 December 19, Ken Cruickshank, “Saint Has No Bones on Holiday”, in The Hartford Courant, volume CXXXVIII, number 353, Hartford, Conn., page 3, column 1:
- It is fitting, says Martin Ebon in his book “Saint Nicholas, Life and Legend,” that the relics of the saint who was eventually converted into jolly figure of Santa Claus should lie in or near New York City. Santa Claus, he says, is a peculiarly New Yorkian creation.
- 1975 December 21, Giles M. Fowler, “Tough, Hot ‘Afternoon’ Set Out in Living Detail”, in The Kansas City Star, volume 96, number 95, Kansas City, Mo., page 1E, column 1:
- The crisis in this film [Dog Day Afternoon] seems peculiarly New Yorkian, with that edge of grotesquerie that seems a day-to-day commonplace in the big town.
- 1976 September 6, John Dornberg, “Hungary: A Revolving Door of Free, Easy Communism”, in The Miami Herald, number 280, Miami, Fla., page 6-D, column 2:
- Parking spaces in the capital are at a premium any time and during rush hours the jams reach New Yorkian proportions — a phenomenon to which asphyxiated Hungarians still point with pride rather than alarm.
- 1979, Ted Smart; David Gibbon, Michigan, New York, N.Y.: Crescent Books, →ISBN:
- Perhaps, then, it is too much to expect that Michigan, so successful in industry, also attracts visitors. Certainly it lacks the New Yorkian vitality and cannot boast the awesomeness of the Grand Canyon, but Michigan’s scenery, with hills carpeted in snow in the winter, magnificent lakeside views and an exciting history restored in buildings, churches and museums, captures the hearts of many American and overseas visitors.
- 1979 July 12, “‘City like this … just beautiful’”, in The Reporter, number 273, Fond du Lac, Wis., page 3, column 1:
- [Dick] Thomas cited one instance involving a New Yorkian twist to a fairly familiar Fond du Lac situation. “Two years ago, when we had the big snow storms, we had separate falls of 20 and 27 inches. They don’t handle the clearing of snow there the way you do here. If they get more than about six inches of it, there’s trouble.
- 1980 September 9, Harold Schindler, “Emmy Show: Nonsense Marathon”, in The Salt Lake Tribune, volume 221, number 148, Salt Lake City, Ut., page C 5, column 2:
- [Pete] Axthelm is a widely read columnist and a knowledgeable bloke when it comes to the Sport of Kings, having worked with the network on the 1979 Marlboro Cup, the English Derby and Irish Sweeps Derby, but his recent appearance for Newsweek on PBS’s Cover Story series ought to be proof enough that Axthelm’s broadcast voice rivals Mickey Spillane’s for unintelligible New Yorkian blather.
- 1984, Eduardo Machado, “The Modern Ladies of Guanabacoa”, in The Floating Island Plays, Theatre Communications Group, published 1991, →ISBN:
- oscar: […] Some of these establishments, like … Merchants’ Coffee House, have become a part of history. / manuela: Really? / oscar: It was there in 1717, no 1774, a “Committee of Correspondence,” started by New Yorkian patriots, sent a letter to a group of Bostonians proposing the union of American colonies.
- 1987, C. K. Williams, “Fame”, in Flesh and Blood, published 2014:
- I recognize the once-notorious radical theater director, now suffering general public neglect / but still teaching and writing and still certain enough of his fame so that when I introduce myself / he regards me with a polite, if somewhat elevated composure, acknowledging some friends in common, / my having heard him lecture once, even the fact that I actually once dashed off a play / inspired by some of his more literary speculations, but never does he ask who I might be, / what do, where live, et cetera, manifesting instead that maddeningly bland and incurious cosmopolitan / or at least New Yorkian self-centeredness, grounded in the most unshakable and provincial syllogism: / I am known to you, you not to me, therefore you clearly must remain beneath serious consideration.
- 1988, Paras Diwan, Private International Law: Indian and English, second edition, Deep & Deep Publications, →ISBN, page 108:
- 1993, Gramophone, volume 71, page 95, column 2:
- [Eero] Koivistoinen is a Finnish tenor and soprano saxophonist, but the flavour of this 1991 date is thoroughly New Yorkian—not because the leader is overshadowed by his very fine American collaborators, but because he has clearly decided to conduct modal investigations in the manner of 20 or so years ago, when he was himself in the United States, and brings to that purpose highly idiomatic writing and arranging skills.
- 1993, Tanya T. Fayen, transl., Hot Soles in Harlem (Discoveries), Pittsburgh, Pa.: Latin American Literary Review Press, translation of Harlem todos los días: Novela by Emilio Díaz Valcárcel, →ISBN, back cover:
- 1996, Outposts Poetry Quarterly, page 8:
- My overall impression, though, is quite simply that [Stephen] Spender is still a poet who will not forsake the image, the object, will not intrusively go beyond what he believes the words are trying to say, and insists on finding similarities within existences that consequently not only reveal a philosophy but just as appropriately reveal a penetrating intellect that is receptive and analytical without anything resembling an offensive egotrajectory, and humble without tolerating the succumbency to anything resembling those Californian and New Yorkian trends in the modern adultery of words.
- 2004, BRW, page 94, column 2:
- Professor Gordon Parker, the executive director of the Black Dog Institute, a mood disorder centre, says stress levels are rising. “In the past decade people have been working longer hours with fewer breaks. It is almost getting New Yorkian, with people eating and drinking as they scurry off to work.”
- 2005, Osei G Kofi, Hello Africa: Tell Me, How Are You Doing?: A Noble Continent in Painful Renaissance, Hello Africa Publishing, →ISBN, page 317:
- 2010 March 10, Robert Strauss, “A new moniker can revitalize a place. Neighborhood name game is serious stuff”, in The Philadelphia Inquirer, number 283, Philadelphia, Pa., page E3, column 4:
- When New York developer Tony Goldman acquired a handful of buildings about a decade ago in the area just east of Broad Street and south of Market, he wanted to call it “Blocks Below Broad,” said Meryl Levitz, head of the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation. That didn’t come to be (Philadelphians don’t like being called “the sixth borough” または anything else New Yorkian, Levitz said), but these days, people are referring to the area as Midtown Village, which seems to be catching on.
- 2012, Jonathan Lethem, Talking Heads’ Fear of Music (33⅓), Continuum International Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 42:
- 2017, Polly Devlin, “The Bowerbirds”, in New York Behind Closed Doors, Gibbs Smith, →ISBN:
- The inescapable Beaux Arts style, the many monuments by McKim, Mead & White, the white brick 1960s behemoth apartment blocks towering above modest brownstone houses; French gothic chateaux, Italian Renaissance palazzi, sham Louis XVI furbelowed facades flaunt themselves next to restrained Georgian-style town houses; baroque-faced churches, prim Puritan places of worship, elaborate synagogues are jumbled next to turreted fantasies, vast apartment blocks, gleaming mirrored office skyscrapers. It’s all utterly New Yorkian.
下位語
名詞
New Yorkian (複数形 New Yorkians)
- A native or inhabitant of New York.
- 1767 July 9, Sylas Neville, The Diary of Sylas Neville, 1767—1788, Oxford University Press, published 1950, page 17:
- Mr Hollis tells me that Bute has established a Jesuit in a school at Kensington and has sent two of his younger children to be educated by him, and had made Barron … send two of his. He thinks with me that the late Act of Parliament respecting New York most tyrannical and hopes the honest New Yorkians will not submit to it, but will draw their swords in defence of their Liberty.
- 1788 October 4, “Site for Capitol”, in Pittsburgh Gazette; republished as “Extracts From The Pittsburgh Gazette: Site for Capitol”, in The Gazette Times, Pittsburgh, Pa., 27 January 1923, page 6, column 5:
- What pity it is that the New Yorkian of that honourable body should make them so blind to real interest as not to prefer the first city on the finest river in the most respectable state in America, to a parcel of buildings, confusedly situated on a pitiful island which has neither ice in winter to protect it, nor force in summer sufficient to prevent Congress and all their papers being carried off by pirates.
- 1835, Frances Anne Butler (Miss Fanny Kemble), Journal of a Residence in America, Paris: […] A. and W. Galignani and Co, […], pages 71, 82, 111–112, and 135:
- At the end of the play, the clever New Yorkians actually called for Mr. Keppel! and this most worthless clapping of hands, most worthlessly bestowed upon such a worthless object, is what, by the nature of my craft, I am bound to care for; I spit at it from the bottom of my soul! […] Montresor banged himself about, broke his time, and made some execrable flourishes in the Prince, whereat the enlightened New Yorkians applauded mightily. […] I do not wonder the New Yorkians did not approve of my Lady Teazle. […] So, all things well considered, the New Yorkians must e’en be contented with the judgment of Miss [Elizabeth] O’Neill, my father, and their obedient humble servant.
- 1836 April, “Another Caw from the Rookwood.—Turpin out again.”, in Fraser’s Magazine for Town and Country, volume XIII, number LXXVI, London: James Fraser, […], page 489, column 1:
- It was impertinently said by (leaden) penciller Willis, of Captain [Frederick] Marryat’s nautical novels, that they could scarcely be entitled to rank as works of literature, “being read chiefly about Wapping.” We need not dwell on the recent results of that choice bit of criticism, the readers of the Times newspaper having been treated to a belligerent correspondence thereanent; from which all rational folks have concluded, that, though the New Yorkian had plenty of disposable lead in his pencil, paper pellets sufficed for his pistol.
- 1852 June 26, “Atlantic and Transatlantic Sketches, Afloat and Ashore. By Captain Mackinnon, […].”, in The Hampshire Advertiser; […], volume XXIX, number 1505, Southampton, Hampshire, section “New Publications”, article section “Death Ahead”, page 7, column 4:
- One great advantage Captain [Lauchlan Bellingham] Mackinnon possessed among the New Yorkians was his determination to be pleased—astonished—captivated—awe-struck if necessary at the beauty of the women, strength of the men, intuitive genius, repidity[sic] of acquirement of all sorts of knowledge, science and—not art—but the talent of making money—and his readiness to acknowledge every where, the most wonderful superiority of our cousin Jonathan Yankee over us dull heavy people at home.
- 1853 August 8, Frances Anne Kemble (Fanny Kemble), Villa Correali,[sic] Sorrento, Monday, August 8, 1853; republished as Further Records, 1848—1883: A Series of Letters by Frances Anne Kemble, Forming a Sequel to Records of a Girlhood and Records of Later Life, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company, 1891, page 305:
- In a letter I got the other day from the other side of the Atlantic, I was assured that Lord [Francis Egerton, 1st Earl of] Ellesmere pronounced the New York Crystal Palace a much more beautiful and better-built edifice than ours of Hyde Park glorious memory. I suppose his lordship must have been bent upon making himself desperately popular with the New Yorkians.
- 1858, [Josias Leslie Porter], “Route 26.—Ride to Deir el-Kamr and Bteddîn.”, in A Handbook for Travellers in Syria and Palestine; Including an Account of the Geography, History, Antiquities, and Inhabitants of These Countries, the Peninsula of Sinai, Edom, and the Syrian Desert; with Detailed Descriptions of Jerusalem, Petra, Damascus, and Palmyra. Maps and Plans. (Murray’s Handbooks for Travellers), part II, London: John Murray, […]. Paris: Galignani; Stassin and Xavier. Malta: Muir, section IV, “Northern Palestine and Damascus”, page 412, column 1:
- 1862 December 2, “Manhattan”, “North and South. Letter from “Manhattan.””, in The Standard, number 11,966, London, published 18 December 1862, page 5, column 4:
- That is rather sublime for a Western man, and largely untrue. A Southerner will meet him with a flat-footed denial, that we are not a nation, in the usual meaning of the word; that we are a mere union of sovereign states—large and small, each state equal, and known by some designation as New Yorkians, Virginians, Tennesseans, South Carolinians, Georgians, &c.; that nobody ever read of United Statesians, and as for Americans, the designation is a grand geographical lie, for Canadians, Kamschatkians,[sic] and Mexicans are equally Americans with the dwellers in the 34 respective states.
- 1863 March 20, George Templeton Strong, The Diary of George Templeton Strong: The Civil War, 1860—1865, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, published 1952, page 307:
- We may thus associate into an organism some eight hundred or one thousand influential New Yorkians who desire to sustain government against Southern rebellion and Northern sectionalism, and strengthen Northern loyalty to the nation, and stimulate property-holders and educated men to assert their right to a voice in the conduct of public affairs, national, state, and municipal, and do a little something toward suppressing the filthy horde of professed politicians that is now living on us and draining our national life by parasitical suction.
- 1869 February, “The Theatre Royal, Dublin, from 1841 to 1845. Part IV.”, in Dublin University Magazine, volume LXXIII, number CCCCXXXIV, Dublin: George Herbert, […]; Hurst and Blackett, London, page 236, column 1:
- He [Edwin Forrest] also appeared as Spartacus in the “Gladiator,” written expressly to his peculiar attributes, by Dr. Bird, of New York, and with his delineation of which he not only electrified the New Yorkians but traversed the United States in countless repetitions throughout their extremest longitude and latitude.
- 1890 June 26, “Masculine Women. Changes in the Most Loveable Thing on Earth, the American Girl.”, in The Newberry Herald and News, Newberry, S.C., page 1, column 7:
- She spoke in a louder tone, and the silly “New Yorkian,” with its commanding note and the affectation of stable boy English, jarred like a file on my nerves.
- 1887 April, Arthur M. Hyde, “Howells’ Novels”, in The Yale Literary Magazine, volume LII, number VII/CCCCLXIII, New Haven, Conn.: […] the editors; Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, […], pages 278–279:
- If you are in search of a typical, commonplace artist, the commonplace college student, the typical Bostonian, or New Yorkian; in short, if you wish to read of any phase of ordinary American life look in one of [William Dean] Howells’ novels.
- 1891 March 8, quoting the Jewelers’ Circular, “It Was Only a Dream”, in The Times, number 5645, Philadelphia, Pa., page 13, column 7:
- New Yorkian (in Philadelphia). “Can you tell me the time?” / Philadelphian (looking at watch). “Quarter to 5 o’clock; but my watch is five minutes fast.” / New Yorkian. “Fast? Friend, what city is this?” / Philadelphian. “Philadelphia, of course.” / (There were a whirring かつ a thumping of a heavy body which gradually settled down on the New Yorkian’s chest. There it pressed him かつ caused him to awake, かつ, with a cold sweat covering his body, he found it was only a dream.)
- 1893, Cope’s Mixture; or the Gentle Art of Advertising (The Gentle Art of Making Advertisements: […]; Cope’s Mixture Selected from His Tobacco Plant (Cope’s Mixture. Cope’s Smoke Room Booklets., number eight)), Liverpool: At the Office […], page 7:
- 1898 March 8, John Robertson, “Have at Thee Again, Ralph Hoyt!”, in The Evening Bee, volume LXXXIII, number 13,198, Sacramento, Calif., published 11 March 1898, page 4, column 2:
- And the out-of- work and the civic functionary and the millionaire said in their hearts: “Great is Diana Single Tax of the New Yorkians.”
- 1906 January 14, Kate Masterson, “The Fascination of Cities”, in The Sunday Star, number 43/16,548, part IV, Washington, D.C., page 7, column 5:
- “Well, all I can say is,” speaks the chorus, “that people who don’t like New York have found out that New York doesn’t like them!” / Which is an epigram scorching in its severity from the New Yorkian who really belongs in some other city, where home, relatives and friends have been left behind in the desire for “little old New York,” as it has been rechristened. They always call it that.
- 1933 February 26, “What Would They Think of Us 2,000 Years From Now—If a Great Cataclysm Wiped Out Most of the Human Race and a Few Surviving Scientists Came Upon Some of the Monstrosities of Modern Art in the Ruins of Our Museums?”, in The American Weekly: Greatest Circulation in the World, page 6, column 1; in The San Francisco Examiner: An American Paper for American People; Monarch of the Dailies, volume CXXXVIII, number 57, San Francisco, Calif., 26 February 1933:
- They might, on the strength of this circumstantial evidence, set us down as far below the Mayan culture and teach the school children of the year 3,933 that in 2,000 years, from the Mayan to the New Yorkian, the American race degenerated wofully.
- 1953 July 22, “Senate Tilt: Takes Acid Turn; “Smear,” “Assassin” Enliven Session; McCarthy, Lehman And Monroney Lash Out At One Another”, in The Cincinnati Enquirer, number 104, Cincinnati, Oh., section “Hiss Letter “Old Stuff””, page 17, column 6:
- Senator Lehman asked why Senator McCarthy didn’t “explain how and why he accepted the support of the Communist party” when he was a Republican candidate for the Senate in 1946. / The New Yorkian said that in 1938 the Communist party had endorsed his candidacy for governor of New York and “I repudiated that offer within 15 minutes.”
- 1959 June 17, “Private Clubs Succumb to Death, Women, Taxes”, in The Hays Daily News, volume XXX, number 188, Hays, Kan., section “Changing Life”, page 8, column 4:
- The aging “proper New Yorkian” who from the depts[sic] of “his” chair in “his” club responded to the story of the unremitting, unsuccessful, and often ludicrous campaign of a flamboyant man of great wealth to crash a top club with “I shouldn’t think any gentlemen’s club would let that bounder inside its doors” is a member of a dying breed.
- 1974, “Introduction”, in Adalberto López and James Petras, editors, Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans: Studies in History and Society, Halsted Press, Schenkman Publishing Company; John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, part II, “Puerto Rico in the Twentieth Century”, page 122:
- Beyond exploitation, the totalitarian nature of U.S. imperialism in Puerto Rico has to some extent deracinated the society: primary and secondary group relationships have been attacked as well as affective relationships in an all-out effort to instrumentalize them for commercial and profitable use: families divide between island and mainland, English and Spanish, New Yorkian against Puerto Rican, statehood against independence, etc.
- 1976 July 21, “Butch Lee Almost Makes U.S. a Basket Case”, in Philadelphia Daily News, Philadelphia, Pa., page 67, columns 1–2:
- “THERE’S SOME RESENTMENT occasionally in Puerto Rico over me playing,” [Butch] Lee says, “because I’m what they call a New Yorkian […]
- 1979, Caribbean Studies Newsletter, page 13:
- The New Yorkian Comes Home to Puerto Rico: Description and Consequences
- 1989, Reg Sprigg, Geology is Fun (Recollections), or, The Anatomy and Confessions of a Geological Addict, →ISBN, page 276:
- I told a weak joke about New Yorkians, about the young lad taken for a stroll in Central Park by his adoring Nanny … A flock of birds alighted on the grass and the young boy called to his nurse … “Say Noise. look at de boids.” … “They’re not boids, Henry; they’re b-i-r-d-s” … “ Gosh, Noise, they sure choip like boids.”
- 1999 July 14, Stu Bykofsky, “Truth telling”, in Philadelphia Daily News: The People Paper, Philadelphia, Pa., section “The last word”, page 35, column 3:
- 2016, Rolf C. Margenau, “The Color Purple”, in Public Information: Coming of Age During the Korean War, second edition, Tewksbury, N.J.: Frogworks Publishing, →ISBN, page 250:
同意語
下位語
Newyorkian
形容詞
Newyorkian (comparative more Newyorkian, superlative most Newyorkian)
- Rare spelling of New Yorkian.
- 1908 April 14, “A Few Lines on the “Big Burg””, in The Shreveport Journal: Official Journal of the City of Shreveport, Shreveport, La., page 4, column 2:
- The editor of perhaps the most widely read magazine issuing from the metropolis was recently asked, “Is your magazine read much in New York city itself?” / “Oh, yes,” he answered, “but we are more popular in the United States.” The answer was indicative. New York is not American. It is merely Newyorkian. And the New Yorker is beginning to know it and to regret it.
- 1993, Tanya T. Fayen, transl., Hot Soles in Harlem (Discoveries), Pittsburgh, Pa.: Latin American Literary Review Press, translation of Harlem todos los días: Novela by Emilio Díaz Valcárcel, →ISBN, pages 131, 151, and 169:
- In bed, he dreamt of Caty, of her sweet and solid body nourished on all the Newyorkian essences, her aromatic Boricuan body of markedly horizontal tendencies. […] In the livingroom decorated with posters of erotic content—Babylonian Newyorkian obsession—the guests move from one spot to another: pale youths with huge afros, girls in slacks, an occasional skirt. […] Oh, a bien chévere couple, he will be ashamed of his father I will raise him by myself Newyorican son, hum, his grain of sand in the Newyorkian population hum, feeling the nostalgic notes of a guitar the rasping of a güiro on the floor below, Boricuan Christmas in the urban setting oh unbearable nostalgia, loneliness profoundly exhausted not only from the effects of the hard work under the Manolo-ian vigilance, an exhaustion from deep within.
- 1997, Cy A Adler, “Leg 2 — West 42nd Street to 125th Street”, in Walking the Hudson, Batt to Bear: From the Battery to Bear Mountain: […], Green Eagle Press, →ISBN, page 21:
- Along this leg one usually can find hot-dogs, knishes and assorted Newyorkian nosh delicacies purchasable from pushcart stands.
- 2017, Piotr Sadowski, The Semiotics of Light and Shadows: Modern Visual Arts and Weimar Cinema, Bloomsbury Academic, →ISBN:
- Interestingly, the best-known of the Friedrichstraße entries today was one ignored by jury at the time: [Ludwig] Mies van der Rohe’s very “Newyorkian” steel and glass tower.
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