Columbine

See also: columbine

English

Etymology 1

From columbine.

Proper noun

Columbine

  1. A census-designated place in Arapahoe County and Jefferson County, Colorado, United States, infamous for the school shooting that happened there in 1999.
  2. The sweetheart of Harlequin in old pantomimes.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From the school shooting that occurred at Columbine High School in 1999.

Noun

Columbine (plural Columbines)

  1. An incident in which someone shoots multiple people at a school.
    • 2005, Nancy E. Dowd, Dorothy G. Singer, Robin Fretwell Wilson, Handbook of Children, Culture, and Violence, page 333:
      Research indicates that many children are afraid of “a Columbine” occurring in their school, or are concerned about other forms of school violence (Aronson, 2000; Garbarino & deLara, 2002; Gaughan et al., 2001; National Association of Attorneys General, 2000).
    • 2011, C.M. Dabbah, The House of Shades, page v:
      Granted, I'm not exactly grabbing an ax and going to town or pulling a “Columbine” but the idea of engaging in such activities has crossed my twisted little mind and plagued my black little heart in dreams only.
    • 2012, John Patton O'Dell, The Blue Wore Through: Collected Works of John Patton O'dell:
      I remember the second song that played was “Run to the Hills.” I thought my head was going to explode, thinking we were ten minutes away from a Columbine.
    • 2013, Annette Fuentes, Lockdown High: When the Schoolhouse Becomes a Jailhouse:
      You've got people in your schools right now plotting a Columbine.
    • 2014, Richard Ford, Let Me Be Frank With You: A Frank Bascombe Book:
      The suburbs are supposedly where nothing happens, like Auden said about what poetry doesn't do; an overinhabited faux terrain dozing in inertia, occasionally disrupted by “a Columbine” or “an Oklahoma City” or a hurricane to remind us what's really real.
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