See also: grass-eater

English

edit

Etymology

edit

grass +‎ eater. Originally in reference to the Irish potato famine, implying that grass was all the Irish had left in their diet.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

grasseater (plural grasseaters)

  1. (offensive, slang, ethnic slur) A white person, especially an Irishman.
    • 2002, Jan Pottker, Janet and Jackie: The Story of a Mother and Her Daughter[1], page 12:
      When the "green mouths," as the impoverished Irish grasseaters were dubbed, entered the United States, they brought cholera, consumption, and typhus with them.
  2. (slang) Alternative spelling of grass-eater (type of police officer)
  3. A herbivore or similar grazing animal.
    • 2010, Anwar A Abdullah, East West - Sword and Word[2], page 289:
      And most of those grasseaters like horses, ox, camels, and llamas had shown early appearance on earth and since its early Cainozoic.
  4. (derogatory) A vegetarian or vegan.
    • 2009, Robert I. C. Fisher, Fodor's Switzerland[3], page 51:
      Founded in 1898, when vegetarians were regarded as “grasseaters,” this restaurant has more than proved its staying power.

References

edit