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Ned (Scottish) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Ned (Scottish)
Ned is a derogatory term applied in Scotland to hooligans, louts or petty criminals,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.dsl.ac.uk/ )〕〔(BBC News - Ned arrives - it's official ), 12 July 2001, retrieved 8 May 2006〕 latterly with the stereotypical implication that they wear casual sports clothes.〔(BBC News - Neds make it into the dictionary ), 9 June 2005, reporting definition in ''Collins English Dictionary''; retrieved 8 May 2006〕〔(Middle class kids 'attracted to ned and chav culture' ). BBC News. 10 September, 2012. Retrieved 10 August, 2013.〕 Such usage in Glasgow dates back to the 1960s or earlier.〔 〕 ==Early use of term== The ''Oxford English Dictionary'' dates the term to the early 19th century.〔(Oxford English Dictionary, definition of "ned", retrieved 1 June 2011 )〕 Former Chief Constable of Glasgow Sir Percy Sillitoe noted use of the word by gangs and police in the 1930s.〔Gorbals had been rehoused elsewhere in the city, "taking their violence with them to the new areas". A 1982 analysis of crime fiction notes Knox's 1977 novel ''Pilot Error'' describing Strathclyde Police as being unconcerned about "neds" getting hurt in a fight as long as no-one else is affected, and translates the term as "Glasgow slang for hoods". In his 2002 autobiography ''Granny Made me an Anarchist'', the Glaswegian writer Stuart Christie described the Glasgow "Neds" as preceding the Teddy Boys of 1955, as a hangover from the poverty of the 1930s. These "Neds" had long hair parted in the middle and smoothed down with liquid paraffin, commonly with a "dowt" tucked behind their ear as a fire hazard which in urban legend had resulted in one "Ned" getting severe burns. He describes them as slouching along with their elbows projecting aggressively, wearing a white silk scarf tucked into their tightly buttoned jacket and carrying a cut-throat razor in its breast pocket. Over this, on outings for a fight or a dance, they allegedly wore an old tweed overcoat with weapons such as hatchets or hammers concealed in the lining. According to Christie, the "Teds" who followed them also had a reputation for wild behaviour, but were too concerned about their clothes to engage in aggression.
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