Cad (pronounced kad)
(1) A local town boy or youth, as contrasted with a university or public school student.
(2) A man who behaves in a dishonorable or irresponsible way, especially towards women (now rare but not yet archaic).
(3) A
servant at a university or public school.
(4) In
architecture and engineering, as CAD, the acronym for Computer Aided (or
Assisted) Design.
(5) In
medicine, as CAD, the acronym for Coronary Artery Disease.
(6) In
computing, an abbreviation for the Ctrl+Alt+Del keyboard combination.
(7) In
currency trading (ForEx), as CAD$, the code of the Canadian dollar
(8) In EU
financial regulation as CAD1 & CAD2, the acronyms for Capital Adequacy
Directives.
(9) A person who stood at the door of an omnibus to open and shut it, and to receive fares; bus conductor (UK archaic).
1730: A shortening of cadet, used originally of servants, later (1831) of town boys by students at Oxford and English public schools (though curiously, at Cambridge alone it meant "snob"), then "townsman" generally. Between 1780-1790, it came to be adopted as a shortening of “caddie” (used to describe “a person who runs errands and does odd jobs”, a use thought of Scottish origin from the boys who carried clubs for golfers). The Scots picked up caddie from the French cadet, from the dialectal capdet (chief, captain), from the Latin capitellum, diminutive of caput (head). Cad seems, in the mid nineteen century (documented 1838-1868) also to have meant a "person lacking in finer feelings" but this use faded, replaced by other words as cad came to be applied mostly to upper class men behaving badly. The related forms are caddish, caddishly & caddishness.
A CAD rendering (right) of Herbie, published on the GrabCAD Community site. CAD (Computer Aided (or Assisted) Design) systems used to be the (very expensive preserve of architects and engineers, the most sophisticated systems usually maintained by corporations. Now, thanks in part to open source software, professional quality CAD systems are available to hobbyists, used obten in conjunctions with 3D printers.
Bounder (pronounced boun-der)
(1) A person who is thought to have attempted, to have bounded to a higher social strata, often based on newly acquired wealth; social climber.
(2) A person, beast or thing that bounds.
(3) A dishonourable, morally reprehensible man (archaic, replaced by cad).
(4) That which limits; a boundary (technical use only).
1535–1545: Originally
an English slang term applied to a “person of objectionable social behaviour”,
it came by the late nineteenth century (attested 1882) to describe a “would-be
stylish person”, a sense later extended to bounding (uninvited as it were) from
a lower to higher social class to another), the implication being such social
mobility is possible but depended on the bounder being accepted by the higher
class.
The construct
is bound + -er. Bound is from the Middle
English bound & bund (preterite) and bounden, bunden, ibunden & ȝebunden (past participle) from the Old English bund-& bunden (ġebunden)
respectively. The –er
suffix is from the Middle English –er
& -ere, from the Old English -ere, from the Proto-Germanic -ārijaz, thought likely a borrowing from
the Latin ārius. Use was reinforced by the synonymous but
unrelated Old French –or & -eor (the Anglo-Norman variant was -our) from
the Latin -(ā)tor, from the primitive Indo-European -tōr.
Rotter (pronounced rot-ah)
A
person thoroughly bad, worthless, objectionable, unpleasant, or despicable.
1889:
The construct is rot(t) + er. Rot is
from the Middle English rotten & roten from the Old English rotian (to rot, become corrupted,
ulcerate, putrefy), from the Proto-Germanic rutāną
(to rot). The –er suffix is from the
Middle English –er & -ere, from the Old English -ere, from the Proto-Germanic -ārijaz, thought likely a borrowing from
the Latin ārius. Use was reinforced by the synonymous but
unrelated Old French –or & -eor (the Anglo-Norman variant was -our)
from the Latin -(ā)tor, from the primitive Indo-European -tōr.
Since use was first documented in the late nineteenth century, meaning
has never shifted from "person deemed objectionable on moral
grounds".
In the hierarchy
of linguistic moral disapprobation, rotter is handy because it condemns
someone as unambiguously bad. There are
synonyms such as scamp, rascal or rogue which can be applied humorously or affectionately
(though usually with a sympatric adjective) but a rotter is just bad. This probably applies too to disparagements like
blackguard, creep, villain & scoundrel but they do rely on some specific
conduct to justify the appellation whereas a rotter can be thought a rotter for
no particular reason; they’re just a rotter.
Cad, bounder or rotter?
Former US film producer, co-founder in 1979 of film & television production & distribution company Miramax and convicted sex offender Harvey Weinstein is probably regarded by most as having ticked all the cad, bounder & rotter boxes. Opinions may vary on whether one label should be lent more emphasis than another but it doubtful many would think none are applicable.
The word cad evolved in the British class system and once was a general cultural put-down, based on it being an earlier descriptor of the servant-class and thus carrying the implication of a lack of finer tastes or manners but other words proved more attractive for this and, by early in the twentieth century, cad had come to refer to a man who behaves in a dishonorable or irresponsible way, especially toward women. The British class system’s put-downs however are in themselves nuanced, class-based things and the point about cad was it applied only to the well-bred, chaps aware of the gentlemanly codes, but who failed to live up to them.
Barnaby Joyce with his (now estranged) wife and four daughters.
There were thus no cads in the working class or the middle classes because, knowing no better, they couldn’t be blamed; they knew not what they did. Those from the lower classes (and especially the aspirational middle-class) certainly could be bounders and anyone could be a rotter but to be a cad, one had to come from the upper strata. The shift in meaning from earlier times was noted by Anthony West in his biography (Aspects of Life (1984)) of his father, HG Wells (1866–1946), a man of modest origins. In the nineteenth century of Wells’ youth, a cad was “…a jumped-up member of the lower classes who was guilty of behaving as if he didn't know that his lowly origin made him unfit for having sexual relationships with well-bred women.” Now, Wells would be called a bounder but not a cad.
The Honorable Barnaby Joyce (b 1967; variously thrice Deputy Prime-Minister of Australia (between local difficulties), 2016-2022), House of Representatives, Canberra ACT, Australia, 2018. Definitely a cad but not a bounder and opinions will be divided on whether or not he's a rotter. Some will be forever convinced while the more thoughtful might concede he was one of those chaps who "could be a bit of a rotter"
Spectrum condition: The redness in the face of the honourable Barnaby Joyce (b 1967; thrice (between local difficulties) deputy prime minister of Australia 2016-2022) is used by his colleagues to gauge where his state of mind lies in the adjectival progression of the plethoric (left), the more plethoric (comparative; centre) and the most plethoric (superlative; right).In mid 2024 Mr Joyce announced he'd given up alcohol, the abstinence inspired by an earlier "incident" in which he was filmed lying drunk on the footpath (sidewalk) next to a Canberra planter box, conducting a mumbled, expletive-laden conversation with his wife. He said he'd since lost 15 kg (33 lb) and given up smoking (it not known if politicians lie about such claims). Interestingly, political scientists seem generally to expect the well-publicized event (one of a number featuring Mr Joyce) would probably result in him increasing his margin at the next election (sprawled drunk in a city street making him "authentic" and "relatable"). When interviewed, the once "notorious drunkard" said: "Maybe at some stage I’ll have a beer again, but at the moment, nah".
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