country cousin

country cousin

Someone unknowledgeable, unsophisticated, or naïve about the niceties and complexities of an urban environment, especially in a humorous or quaint capacity. I always try to lend a hand to the poor country cousins who invariably stand bewildered by the skyscrapers and the incredible noise of traffic. I thought I was savvy enough to live in New York City, but I soon felt like the country cousin.
See also: country, cousin
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

country cousin

One whose lack of sophistication or rural ways may amuse or embarrass city dwellers. For example, The sightseeing guide geared his tour toward country cousins who had never been to a large city before . This term, which literally means "a cousin who lives in the country," has been used in this figurative way since the second half of the 1700s, although the idea is much older (such persons were stock figures of fun in Restoration comedies of the late 1600s and early 1700s).
See also: country, cousin
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a country ˈbumpkin/ˈcousin

(informal, usually disapproving) a person from the countryside who is not used to towns or cities and seems stupid: He felt a real country bumpkin, sitting in that expensive restaurant, not knowing which cutlery to use.
See also: bumpkin, country, cousin
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

country cousin

A visiting unsophisticated relative or friend whose naiveté or rough manners embarrass the host. Such a person became a stock figure of fun in Restoration comedies (of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries). The precise term was current by the second half of the eighteenth century and a cliché by the mid-nineteenth century. Anthony Trollope’s son’s reminiscences (Thomas Adolphus Trollope, What I Remember, 1887) included, “One of the sights of London for country cousins was to see the mails starting.” The term is heard less often today.
See also: country, cousin
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • cousin
  • rubbernecker
  • rubberneck
  • turnip
  • just fell off the turnip truck
  • fall off the cabbage truck
  • fall off the turnip truck
  • greenhorn
  • know-nothing
  • twitty
References in periodicals archive
'' Tom looks like he could be Phil Mitchell's long lost West Country cousin
But when the researchers looked a little closer at the number of injuries suffered by urbanites and country-dwellers in proportion to the surrounding population, a surprising trend emerged: in urban areas, a person's risk of injury-related death was about 20 percent lower than the same risk faced by his or her country cousin. Fall-related injuries 6 a special concern for seniors -- were much more likely in urban areas.
Besides, many parents aspire to marry their daughters into safe environments and not some place where hidden secrets later come to life and they regret it." If the cousin turns out to be more a country cousin, both parties are under pressure to "adjust" to the marriage because parents say so.
You've got to hand it to Uncle Pete and country cousin Bob.
In a moment of reflective repose, Hepzibah asks, "The house or my heart, which has more cobwebs?" Those cobwebs are soon swept away by the arrival of Hargrove, and far more significantly, that of her country cousin from Virginia, Phoebe Pyncheon (Samantha Doolittle), who awakens Hepzibah's long dormant feelings and fills her with a sense of purpose.
With job losses and insecurity raging in the west, suddenly the humble Indian government employee has become attractive once again after years of languishing as a country cousin to the 'fat cats' of the marriage market.
At the outset, it was the poor country cousin on the European scene.
She's even got a drag king persona named Mo Boutte, Alotta's country cousin.
There's the sheepdog - the country cousin of Gromit - the ever-hungry pigs and the unsuspecting farmer who has no idea what goes on behind his back.
The traditionally seasoned patties are part of the Country Cousin brand product line.
Armstrong is also familiar with the exacting and complex theoretical work of Jacques Derrida and the psychoanalysts Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok, and it is encouraging to see someone prepared to use this material in relation to Hardy, who for many years was patronized as an ingenuous country cousin. It is entirely to his credit that Armstrong assumes these writers could provide a stimulating yet sympathetic critical context for Hardy's carefully crafted and subtly nuanced poetry.
Almost overnight, the citified Baby Bell was neatly tucked beneath its country cousin's wings in a $26 billion merger that made Bell Atlantic the nation's second largest telecommunications company, behind AT&T.
Thorson designed the characters and did the model sheets for some solid Disney classics: The Old Mill, Wynken, Blyken and Nod, Country Cousin and Toby Tortoise Returns.
This is Colonial architecture at its peak -- the country cousin who outshines the townsfolk.
Walt Disney received his fifth consecutive award in the cartoon category, for Country Cousin. This was the first year in which awards were presented for best supporting actor and actress.