English edit

Etymology edit

Sense 2 from soda fountains and ice cream counters as once popular meeting spots in drugstores.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

drugstore cowboy (plural drugstore cowboys)

  1. (dated) Someone who dresses and acts like a cowboy but has none of the skills.
    Synonym: dude
    • 1974, Film Heritage[1]:
      When we first came to California and we started putting on Westerns, there were no riders in Hollywood; they were all drugstore cowboys.
    • [1989 May 29, “Who's a ‘Drugstore Cowboy’?”, in Newsweek, page 29:
      The Soviet Union, he [Marlin Fitzwater] insisted, was engaged “in a very strange pattern of public-relations gambits”; he compared Mikhail Gorbachev to a “drugstore cowboy,” an old-fashioned term for a pretentious impostor.]
    • 1990, Kenny Rogers, “Introduction”, in Cowboy Tales: Western Classics from American Masters[2], Viking Studio Books, →ISBN:
      I was raised on Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, and as a kid I dreamed of doing the things real cowboys do—not drugstore cowboys or rodeo cowboys, but the real sweat-and-dirt variety—like roping and riding, herding cattle, and breaking horses.
  2. A young man who loafs around town, especially a lady's man who hangs out in public places in an attempt to pick up girls.
    • 1934, James T. Farrell, chapter 21, in The Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan:
      When any of these jazz-age drugstore cowboys starts trying to fool around with his sister, he won't mince his words. He'll say, "See here, now, what do you mean, trying to ruin my sister?"
    • 1984, Carolyn Osborn, The Fields of Memory, Bryan, Texas: Shearer Publishing, →ISBN, page 14:
      I saw Duel in the Sun late one Friday afternoon, came out blinking at the drugstore cowboys standing in front of the fly-spattered windows of the cafe across the street []

See also edit

Further reading edit