Clippie

/ˈklɪpi/ noun

Definition

A British term for a female bus conductor who collects fares from passengers.

Etymology

From 'clip' (to cut or punch tickets) + '-ie' (diminutive suffix). Used primarily in mid-20th century Britain when conductors would clip or punch passengers' tickets.

Kelly Says

This word captures a specific moment in history—before automated payment systems, buses had conductors whose whole job was literally clipping tickets! The '-ie' ending is very British and often created affectionate or occupational nicknames like 'postie' for postal workers.

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Informal occupational term (bus conductor) used predominantly for women during mid-20th century; reflects gender segregation in transit labor where women held this role while men dominated driver positions.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'conductor' or 'bus conductor' for gender-neutral occupational reference.

Inclusive Alternatives

["conductor","bus conductor","transit attendant"]

Empowerment Note

Women clippies were central to British and Commonwealth public transport during WWII and after, often highlighted as symbols of female independence while simultaneously kept in lower-paid roles than male drivers.

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.