"corpse," 1859, slang, from stiff (adj.) which had been associated with notion of rigor mortis since c.1200. Meaning "working man" first recorded 1930, from earlier gen. sense of "contemptible person" (1882). Slang meaning "something or someone bound to lose" is 1890 (originally
mod. and stiffed. alcohol intoxicated; dead drunk. : She knows how to stop drinking before she gets stiff.
n. a drunkard. : Some stiff staggered by—belching clouds of some beery smell. , The guy's a stiff, and you want to run him for mayor? Even in this town that's going too far.
mod. dead. (Originally underworld.) : He's stiff. There's nothing that can be done.
n. a corpse. (Underworld.) : They pulled another stiff out of the river last night. Looks like another mob killing.
n. a fellow worker; a fellow tramp. (Originally hobos.) : This stiff wants some help finding a flop for the night.
tv. to fail to tip someone who expects it. : Ya know, you can tell right away when a guy's gonna stiff you—ya just know. , I guess I get stiffed two, three times a day.
tv. to cheat someone. : The clown selling hot dogs stiffed me for about forty cents.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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