subculturist
English
editEtymology
editsubculture + -ist
Adjective
editsubculturist (comparative more subculturist, superlative most subculturist)
- Synonym of subculturalist
- 1999, Mark Jacobson, “Teenage Frankensteins”, in New York:
- And let me say: I didn't feel so good about it, watching my daughter standing there with her subculturist friends, all of whom seemed very nice even if made up like a brace of Morticias.
Noun
editsubculturist (plural subculturists)
- Synonym of subculturalist
- 2006, Ross Haenfler, Straight Edge: Hardcore Punk, Clean Living Youth, and Social Change, →ISBN, page 176:
- The chain's website asks, "What's your scene?" and then provides the categories—club, gothic, lounge, punk, street, rockabilly, indie—as if with the click of the mouse aspiring subculturists could purchase a starter kit for the scene of their choice
- 2007, Michael Weinberg, Careers in Crime: An Applicant's Guide Paperback, →ISBN, Money Launderer, page 138:
- Professional attire is indicated for interactions with financial officers, but less formal, stylized costuming may be more disarming among criminal subculturists.