jock

See also: Jock

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈd͡ʒɒk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɒk

Etymology 1

Unknown. Suggested to be a hypocoristic for John (compare Jack).

Noun

jock (plural jocks)

  1. (slang, archaic) A common man.
  2. (Britain, slang, derogatory) A Scotsman.

Etymology 2

The computer slang meanings are derived from jockey. The athletic slang meanings in turn date from the middle 20th century and are simple abbreviations of jockstrap, which is in turn derived from the older slang meaning of jock itself, which dates from the 17th century, and whose etymology is unknown.

Noun

jock (plural jocks)

  1. (informal) A jockey.
  2. (slang, rare, dated) The penis.
  3. An athletic supporter worn by men to support the genitals especially during sports.
    Synonym: jockstrap
  4. (US, slang) A young male athlete (through college age).
  5. (US, slang, derogatory) An enthusiastic athlete or sports fan, especially one with few other interests, often stereotyped as slow-witted person of large size and great physical strength.
    • 1984, Steve Zacharias; Jeff Buhai (screenplay), Revenge of the Nerds, spoken by Lewis (Robert Carradine):
      'Cause all jocks ever think about is sports, all we ever think about is sex.
  6. (slang) A disc jockey.
    • 2010, Stephen B. McSwain, The Enoch Factor: The Sacred Art of Knowing God, page 95:
      As a teenager, I laid down the sword and decided I wanted to be a disc jockey. [] I'd sit outside the studio and watch with envy and admiration as the jocks performed in the small room on the other side of the soundproof window []
  7. (US, dated computing slang, in combination) A specialist computer programmer.
    compiler jock
    systems jock
Translations

Verb

jock (third-person singular simple present jocks, present participle jocking, simple past and past participle jocked)

  1. (slang) To masturbate.
    Synonyms: jack off, jerk off, wank, wank off
  2. (slang) To humiliate.
    Synonym: punk
  3. (slang) To steal.
    Synonym: gank

Etymology 4

Unknown.

Noun

jock (uncountable)

  1. (dialect, Yorkshire) Food; meals.
    • 1881, Ben Preston, Dialect and Other Poems, page 19:
      Thear's boan-idle nowbles, baht hahses an' lands, 'at al walk on a carpeted path, an' nivver do nowt wi' ther lily-white hands bud lift uther fowk's jock to ther maath.
      1884, William Cudworth (of Bradford), Yorkshire Dialect and Character Sketches, page 15:
      Hah's a growing lad to thrive baht jock?

Derived terms

terms derived from all etymologies (probably should be sorted)

Yola

Etymology

From Middle English jakke, from Anglo-Norman jacke.

Noun

jock

  1. belly

References

  • Jacob Poole (1867), William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, page 48
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