Collar (pronounced kol-er)
(1) The part of a shirt, coat, dress, blouse, etc
that encompasses the neckline of the garment and is sewn permanently to it,
often so as to fold or roll over.
(2) A similar but separate, detachable article of
clothing worn around the neck or at the neckline of a garment.
(3) Anything worn or placed around the neck.
(4) In law enforcement, a slang term for securing an
arrest.
(5) In metalworking, a piece rolled to wrap itself
around a roller.
(6) In biology, a marking or structure resembling a
collar, such as that found around the necks of some birds.
(7) In engineering, a section of a shaft or rod
having a locally increased diameter to provide a bearing seat or a locating
ring
(8) In butchery, a cut of meat, especially bacon,
from the neck of an animal.
(9) In ancient chivalric orders, a symbol of
membership.
(10) In jewelry, an ornament for the neck, a variant
of which is the choker.
(11) In rehabilitative medicine, a device worn around
the neck to support the head.
(12) In architecture, a variety of beams and ties
which are structural elements in roof framing between rafters.
(13) In baseball, a slang term for a player getting no
hits in a game.
(14) In plumbing, a type of sleeve used to join two
tubes.
(15) In industrial power generation, a piece of
hardware used on power transmission devices as a mechanical stop, locating
device, or bearing face.
(16) In the profession of the hangman, the knot of the
noose (archaic).
(17) In extractive underground mining, a curb or a
horizontal timbering around the mouth of a shaft.
(18) In botany, the neck or line of junction between
the root of a plant and its stem.
(19) A ring-like part of a mollusk in connection with
the esophagus.
(20) In nautical architecture, an eye formed in the
bight or bend of a shroud or stay to go over the masthead; also, a rope to
which certain parts of rigging, as dead-eyes, are secured.
(21) In
financial market jargon, a trading strategy using options in a ways that there
exists both an upper limit on profit and a lower limit on loss, constructed
through taking equal but opposite positions in put and call options with
different strike prices.
1250–1300:
From the Middle English coler from
the Anglo-French colier & Old
French coler, derived from the Latin collāre (neckband, collar), the
construct being coll (truncation of collum (neck)) + āre (neuter (as noun) suffix of āris). Ultimate source was the primitive
Indo-European kwol(o) (neck) which entered both the Old
Norse and the Middle Dutch as hals (neck),
literally "that on which the head turns" from the root kwel (move round, turn about).
The
meaning "border at the neck of a garment” emerged in the fourteenth
century and all meanings since are in some way analogous. Collier
exists in Modern French, again from the Latin; cognate with the Gothic hals, the Old English heals and the Spanish cuello.
Collars
Noted for slogans rather than imaginative linguistic flourishes, Australian Prime Minister Scott
Morrison (b 1968; Australian prime-minister since 2018), a confessed meat-eater, was so shocked at the tactics some rabid vegans had used to disrupt the slaughter industry's supply chains, he was moved to describe the protesters, inter alia, as “green-collar criminals”.
He’d likely have preferred to label them eco-terrorists and have them locked-up
somewhere but may have been advised that might be unlawful or at least hyperbolic. Interestingly the phrase “green-collar crime” is used both to
describe some of the actions of activists and the environmental damage against
which they’re protesting; it’s not clear which meaning will prevail and it's an amusing if confusing co-existence.
It’s
among the most recent of the “collar” words, all variations of the old
white-blue collar delineation (except the ecclesiastical dog collar which is
from the nineteenth century). Blue collar worker was used first in
1924 to describe the working class, an allusion to the hard-wearing blue denim
they stereotypically wore. White-collar worker was coined in the
1930s by US writer Upton Sinclair (1878–1968) in connection with those absorbed
in clerical, administrative and managerial functions. Used mostly in economics and sociology, the
collars have been handy (if imprecise) definitional shorthand in both academic
and other writing.
Blue collar: Originally, a member of the working class who
performs manual work and earns either an hourly wage or is paid a piece rate. The labor market in recent decades has changed so much that for economists it may now be a useless or al least misleading term although culturally, it is still of real utility.
White collar: Historically, salaried professionals, office
workers and management; ie clean, safe jobs in pleasant physical environments
although for many, salaries were low.
Pink collar: Now probably obsolete,
it described a member of the working class in the service industry in occupations
such as waiters and retail or other roles involving relations with people. Origin of the term was the need to describe
the rapidly expanding employment in service industries during the 1990s and its
overwhelmingly female demographic. Now
treated as sexist, there were suggestions it could morph into something
gender-neutral but it didn’t work as well and is now close to extinct although
the companion pink collar crime
endures and remains a descriptor of white collar crimes committed by women
where the loot stolen is of relatively low-value.
Gold collar: A highly skilled multi-disciplinarian who
combines the intellectual and practical skills of both white & blue collar
employees.
Red collar: Government workers of all types. In China, it refers also to Communist Party
officials working in private companies, the implication being they’re placed
there for some party purpose; similar in both function and ultimate purpose but
different in ideology to the old party commissars.
Grey collar: Skilled technicians,
typically someone whose role is a mix of white and blue collar (although some
say the distinction between grey and gold is a bit vague; notion is that gold
are higher paid than grey). Like gold, grey collar is a recent invention which seems not to have caught on; both may die out.
New collar: Jobs said to require the technical and soft
skills needed to work with contemporary technology industry; often associated
with a non-traditional education path.
Cynics suggest it’s there to describe university drop-outs whose
start-ups work out ok.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0dtas2Mp-zGdz5tPCjgTAy70Fq5w_UWlqm54H9FCZWJHBFWUCKJoIio4XLoxKACE6lUKzyyLIP0CRj1k53q-nxT3I-ulB4915LJnomB1k4dmH8BEf3KlLbodw6RpARcpcLbQhJzFQt5S-7ZcN7_UD1oZYWEwhWkt5FW7bh6ahvmY6JBQ7SfIcn9OC/w554-h310/001%20C&AB.JPG)
Happy times in dog collars. Cardinal George Pell (1941-2023, left) with his predecessor as Archbishop of Melbourne, Sir Frank Little (1925–2008, right).
Dog collar: Christian clergy (although, technically, only
a sub-set of the whole); now rarely seen outside of churches and courtrooms. In the public consciousness, such is the association of the male clergy with pedophilia that the clergy, when out and about, usually do so in disguise (mufti). That's actually not new. One of the (many) reasons Jesuit priests were once so mistrusted was that they tended not to wear clerical garb, claiming the wearing of everyday clothes permitted them to be closer to the people. Actually, it was just a trick so they could spy on them.
No collar: Artists, the precariously employed and others
who tend to privilege passion and personal growth over financial gain.
Orange collar: Prison laborers, named for the orange
jumpsuits most associated with inmates in the US prison system.
Green collar: Workers in a wide range of professions
relating to the environment and renewable energy. Confusingly, green
collar crime is used by both sides to describe the actions of their
opponents in that activists refer to those accused of causing environmental
damage as green collar criminals whereas the slaughter industry uses the same label for the radical
vegans who disrupt their production or distribution.
Scarlet collar: Prostitutes and ancillary staff (brothel receptionists et al included in an example of the way the "collar" labels are sometimes applied to industry sectors as well as specific occupations).
Black collar: Originally used to describe manual laborers
in jobs when workers habitually become very dirty although it has been extended
to those working in the illicit black
economy. Of late it’s been applied
also to (1) the pro-gun movement in the US, (2) artists who have adopted black
clothing by choice and (3) those in insecure, low-paid employment. The meaning may now be too diluted to be of much use.
Virtual collar: Robots performing manual repetitive tasks,
both physical and virtual but has been used also to describe the cheap, mobile
technology capital uses as a tool of control.
Rainbow collar: Workers in industries which serve or are most
identified with the LGBTQQIAAOP community.
This was once a largely volunteer movement but increasing has a
paid-labor component. The adjectival rainbow, in polite society, has now
wholly supplanted pink (eg the earlier pink
dollar), partly because of the historical use of pink labels or descriptors
by repressive régimes. Pink collar was never linked with the
LGBTQQIAAOP community and the earlier lavender collar enjoyed only a brief linguistic career.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbLbRaK-psWLkZ1Zg0CyfeE8Gh7YJC1U6MI6sDoyojG4nIDK-3KU8Tw9sGi-pXEzPpij97qZ6bIfiFfo9IvSORpqa1-Lr5ib_QTN6xgl9fq6GolL_2vdqEp4kQ_QmP0OntW4hcmf4KNnoR8KpCIWnCsD0eMFj4T4tz4f2sAehwGOkUJAEXlFYWkI8y/w556-h899/002%20LL%20NYC%20March%202014.jpg)
Lindsay Lohan in army green, fur-collared jacket over blouse with metal studded collar, New York, March 2014.