hard hat

hard hat

1. modifier Requiring the use of rigid protective headgear, usually a location or area. This is a hard-hat zone, so you won't be let in unless you're wearing the appropriate protective clothes.
2. modifier Of or characterized by extremely conservative views, beliefs, or opinions. This area of the country has some pretty entrenched hard-hat politics.
3. noun A construction worker, in reference to the protective headpiece made from rigid metal or plastic that is often worn in construction work. Though the work was tough, I loved working as a hard hat when I was younger.
4. noun Any working-class individual with extremely conservative views or beliefs. Though opinion polls show the governor's approval ratings slipping in the rest of the state, she still enjoys considerable support from hard hats in more rural areas.
See also: hard, hat
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

hard hat

A working-class ultraconservative. For example, They were counting on a large number of votes from the hard hats. This term alludes to the rigid protective headgear worn by construction workers, who were noted for their conservatism during the tumultuous 1960s. [c. 1960]
See also: hard, hat
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

hardhat

1. n. a protective helmet worn around construction sites. (Standard English.) You’ll need a hardhat to come into this area.
2. n. a construction worker. (Usually derogatory.) The hardhats didn’t care much for the actress’s politics.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • hardhat
  • nothing if not
  • nothing if not (something)
  • nothing if not something
  • high old
  • keen as mustard
  • a broth of a boy
  • broth
  • broth of a boy
  • ever so/ever such...
References in periodicals archive
Production of the V-Gard Green hard hat is scheduled at the company's Murrysville, Pa., manufacturing facility near Pittsburgh.--www.MSAsafety.com, www.SafetyWorks.com
Whether you are a construction worker or a committed fan of DIY, the Sky Blue hard hats are a must for followers of the club.
When a jury member asked whether Mr Cochran would normally have worn a hard hat for such a job, North Wales Central coroner Mr Hughes said: "The injury he suffered was so terrible that it is still unlikely that he would have survived even with a hard hat."
"He was wearing a stetson instead of a hard hat so he had no intention of fol lowing the hunt and was heading back to the trailer which he had brought his horse in.
Jean Paul Vandermerwe was sacked by Drake Port Distribution Services (DPDS) last year when he wore a white hard hat instead of a regulation yellow one.
IN A recent edition of the Coventry Telegraph there was a big headline "Shoot to Thrill", and underneath it was the picture of a 10-year-old boy in a hard hat pointing a gun straight at the camera.
As she is in a dockyard area perhaps she should be told to wear a hard hat, overalls and safety boots instead of business suit and high heels.
The nail penetrated Mr Welsh's hard hat and pierced his skull, but there was no brain damage.
"Goussein manages to perform his acrobatics without even a safety net so it is ridiculous he is being asked to wear a hard hat.
A LIVERPOOL dock worker who was dismissed for wearing the wrong hard hat claimed yesterday he was a victim of racial abuse.
She again drove a on a public road without a seat belt - and then went riding without a hard hat.
Having put on overalls and a hard hat, the Princess met men working at one of Britain's most productive coal seams, as a guest of RJB Mining.