zipperhead
English
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Etymology 1
From zipper + head. From the leather helmets formerly used by early Canadian armoured crewmen, with a pattern of stitching resembling a zipper. There is also a folk etymology referring to the zippers on armoured-vehicle crew suits (repurposed flight suits).
Noun
zipperhead (plural zipperheads)
- (Canada, military slang) A soldier in the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps or in the Armoured Crewman military trade.
Synonyms
References
- Edward C. Russell (1980), Customs and Traditions of the Canadian Armed Forces, Deneau and Greenberg, Department of National Defence, →ISBN, p 65.
Etymology 2
1960s–1970s, zipper + head. Used by soldiers during the Korean and Vietnam Wars; multiple hypotheses exist as to the specific origin. One is that if an East Asian person were shot in the middle of the forehead with a machine gun, the head would split as if being unzipped; another is that the appearance of tire or tank tracks on a body which had been run over by a military Jeep or tank resembled a zipper.
Noun
zipperhead (plural zipperheads)
- (US, military slang, derogatory, offensive, ethnic slur) A person of East Asian descent.
Synonyms
- almond eyes
- chicken lips
- dink
- gook
- slant eye
- slopehead
- zipperlid
Further reading
- zipperhead at the Google Books Ngram Viewer.