Apedia

Jerkwater Water Trains Called June Small Ran Lines

Word jerkwater
Date June 26, 2013
Type adjective
Syllables JERK-waw-ter
Etymology We owe the colorful Americanism "jerkwater" to the invention of the steam engine-an advancement that significantly accelerated travel by rail but also had its drawbacks. One drawback was that the boilers of the early locomotives needed to be refilled with water frequently, and water tanks were few and far between. As a result, the small trains that ran on rural branch lines often had to stop to take on water from local supplies. Such trains were commonly called "jerkwaters" from the motion of jerking the water up in buckets from the supply to the engine. The derogatory use of "jerkwater" for things unimportant or trivial reflects the fact that these jerkwater trains typically ran on lines connecting small middle-of-nowhere towns.
Examples "We're stranded in some jerkwater town in the middle of nowhere," said Larry when he called to tell us that the car's engine had blown.

"Hardworking and reserved, Jesse might use five words when the situation called for nine. The son of Mexican immigrants, he was born in the cheerless, jerkwater town of Firebaugh, Calif., in 1938; facts that undoubtedly contributed to his abiding humility." - From an article by Scott P. Charles in the Philadelphia Inquirer, June 12, 2012
Definition 1 : remote and unimportant
2 : trivial

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Inselberg german meaning isolated africa hill rock spectacular

Previous card: Perfervid meaning century warmth fervent exaggerated june adjective

Up to card list: Word of the Day