skid road
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A road made of logs: A primitive roadway constructed from logs laid side-by-side, used for hauling freshly cut timber from a forest.
- The district of a town frequented by loggers: An area in a town, often characterized by cheap hotels, bars, and services, that is commonly inhabited or visited by loggers and other transient laborers.
Examples of Usage
- Noun:
- The lumberjacks used the skid road to drag the massive logs out of the forest.
- After getting paid, many of the workers would head into the skid road to spend their wages.
Advanced Usage
- The term often carries historical connotations, referring to logging practices and transient worker culture in North America during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
- In modern urban contexts, "skid road" can be a precursor to the term "skid row," which denotes a run-down area populated by the very poor or homeless.
Variants and Related Words
- Skid Row (n): A dilapidated urban area marked by poverty and homelessness. This term evolved from "skid road."
- The charity provides meals for people living on skid row.
Synonyms
- Logging road: Specifically for the roadway made of logs.
- Timber road: Specifically for the roadway made of logs.
- Tenderloin district: For the district frequented by loggers/transients (though this can refer to any vice district).
- Transient quarter: For the district frequented by loggers/transients.
Notes on Meaning
- The two primary meanings are historically linked. The log-built roads ("skid roads") often led directly to the areas where loggers lived and spent their money, which consequently became known by the same name.
- It is important to distinguish this term from the more common modern phrase "skid row," though they share an etymological origin. "Skid road" specifically references its logging origins.
Noun
- a road made of logs on which freshly cut timber can be hauled
- the district of a town frequented by loggers