jects

English

Etymology

From projects by shortening.

Noun

jects pl (plural only)

  1. (US, informal) A multi-story low-income housing development.
    • 1991, Alex Kotlowitz, There Are No Children Here: The Story of Two Boys Growing Up in The Other America, Anchor Books (1992), →ISBN, page 264:
      A few days later, Pharoah, now eleven, told a friend: "I worry about dying, dying at a young age, while you're little. I'll be thinking about I want to get out of the jects. []
    • 2006 December 28, TJ Xenos [username], “Re: Monie Love gets fired for making Young Jeezy sound like a tard...”, in rec.music.hip-hop, Usenet:
      Monie grew up in the music industry, not in the jects.
    • 2011, Garrett S. King, Something to Live For, Xlibris (2011), →ISBN, page 116:
      Olander grew up around the “jects,” but wasn't born there; he actually lived about two blocks away in a three-story house with his mother and younger siblings.

Synonyms

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