grass-eater
See also: grasseater
English
Etymology 1
grass + eater; applied to bribe-accepting polics by the Knapp Commission in the 1970s.
Noun
grass-eater (plural grass-eaters)
- An organism notable for eating grass
- A fish of species Distichodus rostratus or Distichodus engycephalus, of Africa
- (figuratively) A police officer who accepts offered bribes but does not actively seek them out.
- Alternative form: grasseater
- Coordinate term: meat-eater
- 2002, Edwin J. Delattre, Character and Cops: Ethics in Policing, American Enterprise Institute, →ISBN, LCCN 2002016453, OCLC 1148207295, page 79:
- But why do police become grass-eaters at all, if they lack the greed and contempt fo decency necessary to become meat-eaters?
- 2012, Lee P. Brown, Policing in the 21st Century: Community Policing, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, OCLC 823380831, page 50:
- It was the grass-eaters, the commission found, that made corruption respectable within the organization, encouraging a code of silence among officers.
- 2016 September 13, Regoli, John D. Hewitt, Anna E. Kosloski, Exploring Criminal Justice, Jones & Bartlett Publishers, →ISBN, LCCN 2016022404, OCLC 1201411022, page 113:
- Grass-eaters constituted the majority of police officers who were corrupt; meat-eaters were rare. But meat-eaters are more dangerous. They aggressively misuse their police powers for personal gain.
Etymology 2
Calque of Japanese 草食系男子 (sōshokukei danshi, “herbivorous/grass-eating male”).
Noun
grass-eater (plural grass-eaters)
- (derogatory, slang) A celibate man, especially a Japanese man, who eschews dating and sexual relationships.
- Synonym: herbivore man
- 2011 March 17, Paul Mceuen, Spiral, Hachette UK, →ISBN:
- That is what the modern men of Japan have done, these grass-eaters.
- 2016 July 1, Genaro Castro-Vazquez, Intimacy and Reproduction in Contemporary Japan (Routledge Research on Gender in Asia Series), Routledge, →ISBN, page 62:
- The grass-eaters fail to maintain a 'manly' appearance, snared instead by the world of cosmetics and fashion which makes them look soft, 'fragile and girlie' ( […] ).
- 2016 November 14, Kittredge Cherry, Womansword: What Japanese Words Say About Women, Stone Bridge Press, →ISBN, OCLC 1036915693:
- She dubbed them “herbivore men” (shoshoku danshi) in a 2006 article, and the phrase caught on as the nation took note of the gentle grass-eaters. Their lesser-known counterparts are the “carnivore women” (nikushoku joshi) who take the initiative in life and love.