English edit

Etymology edit

Humorous conflation of knitting and yoghurt-making, two hobbies popular among groups who support sustainability and self-sufficiency.

Verb edit

knit yoghurt (third-person singular simple present knits yoghurt, present participle knitting yoghurt, simple past and past participle knitted yoghurt)

  1. (humorous, sometimes derogatory) To behave in a left-wing or hippie fashion; an imagined activity among left-wing and hippie groups.
    • 2004, William Venator, Vestiges of Freedom, WritersPrintShop, →ISBN, page 69:
      Keep off hugging organic trees while doing GM-free yoga and knitting yoghurt, and I'll be happy.
    • 2005, Stephen Price, Monkey Man, New Island Books:
      Certainly, there's no shortage of tree-huggers in magical, mystical Ireland, but mostly they're foreign nationals who stay over West, behaving themselves, doing up cottages, knitting yoghurt and stuff.
    • 2012, Shirley Wells, Dying Art, Harlequin, →ISBN, page 146:
      He didn't look as if he knitted yoghurt for one thing. He looked too sensible and respectable to have anything in common with Dylan's dope-smoking mother.
    • 2013, Joanna Nadin, The Life of Riley, Oxford University Press - Children, →ISBN:
      Mum is going to join the Greens instead. Dad says at least they are all so busy knitting yoghurt they do not have time for sexual scandal.

Derived terms edit

See also edit