unwashed
Related to unwashed: rabble, unwashed masses
the great unwashed
The general public, especially those of the lower and lower-middle classes. Critics are hailing the film as a modern masterpiece, though it doesn't seem to be causing too great a stir among the great unwashed The world of the super rich is one that we among the great unwashed can't even begin to understand.
See also: great, unwashed
the unwashed masses
The broader general public, especially those of the lower and lower-middle classes. The film didn't cause too great a stir with the unwashed masses, but it has been considered a milestone in cinematic achievement among film critics. The world of the super-rich is one that we among the unwashed masses can't even begin to understand.
See also: masse, unwashed
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
the great unwashed
Fig. the general public; the lower middle class. The Simpsons had a tall iron fence around their mansion—put there to discourage the great unwashed from wandering up to the door by mistake, I suppose. Maw says the great unwashed don't know enough to come in out of the rain.
See also: great, unwashed
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
the great unwashed
People use the great unwashed to mean poor or ordinary people. A man quickly led the Queen's husband away from the great unwashed. Note: This expression is used humorously.
See also: great, unwashed
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.
the (great) unwashed
the mass or multitude of ordinary people. derogatory 1997 Spectator Early piers tried to be rather socially exclusive, but the need to maintain revenue soon opened the gates to the great unwashed.
See also: unwashed
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
the great unwashed
n. most of the common people; the hoi polloi. I usually find myself more in agreement with the great unwashed than with the elite.
See also: great, unwashed
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
great unwashed, the
The working classes. The term showed up in print in the early nineteenth century in Theodore Hook’s The Parson’s Daughter (1833), where it appears in quotation marks. Exactly who first coined the phrase is not known, but in Britain it was used to describe the rabble of the French Revolution who rose up against the privileged classes. Although Eric Partridge said that its snobbishness had made it obsolescent by the 1940s, it is still used ironically.
See also: great
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
Great Unwashed
A disparaging term for the common man. The phrase first appeared in an 1830 novel, Paul Clifford, by the British novelist and playwright Edward Bulwer-Lytton: “He is certainly a man who bathes and ‘lives cleanly,' (two especial charges preferred against him by Messrs. the Great Unwashed).” Among other cynics (although they would call themselves realists) who used the phrase was H. L. Mencken, who also referred to the majority of Americans as the “booboisie.”
See also: great, unwashed
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price
- Great Unwashed
- great unwashed, the
- the great unwashed
- the unwashed masses
- bid (something) down
- bid down
- bidding
- bargain (someone or something) down
- bargain down
- lower voice