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Soap-dodgerMeaningA scruffy or dirty person; one who washes rarely. OriginThis derogatory term was coined in the UK in the late 1980s/early 1990s. It was often applied to that itinerant drop-out group the 'New Age travellers', who are also derided as 'crusties'. The first mention I can find of the term in print is Tony Thorne's Bloomsbury Dictionary of Contemporary Slang, 1990:
'Dodger' is often used in UK slang. In the 18th century, tub-thumping, ranting preachers were called 'Devil-dodgers'; for example, this piece from James Lackington's Memoirs, 1791:
More recently, we have seen 'doom-dodgers' and 'coffin-dodgers'; for example, in the 1978 Journal of the Royal Society of Arts:
and from The Independent on Sunday May 1996, in a piece reviewing a glossary of English/Scottish terms aimed at aiding Americans in reading Irvine Welsh's novel Trainspotting;
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