spelunker

English

Etymology

spelunk + -er. Coined by New England cave explorer Roger Charles Johnson in the 1930s.[1]

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -ʌŋkə(r)

Noun

spelunker (plural spelunkers)

  1. (Canada, US) One who explores caves; one who spelunks, caver; British English: potholer
    • 1943, Clay Perry, Author and Journalist Magazine:
      I took to fishing, on mountain brooks and lakes, and finally I was inveigled into becoming a spelunker. A spelunker is a human worm who crawls into caves ("splunca" is Latin for cave) and explores them.
  2. (derogatory) An amateur or inadequately prepared caver.
    • 2002, Doug van Hemessen, “Caved in: Inside a crevice cave on the Niagara Escarpment”, in Seasons, volume 43, page 41:
      I am officially a spelunker – but not yet a caver. The dictionary definition of spelunking is “exploring caves for sport.” Serious enthusiasts shun the term, however. They are cavers. A spelunker is an inexperienced amateur. On this dry and balmy mid-November Saturday, our group contains three spelunkers and two cavers.
    • 2003, Dangerous Dick & the Duckbusters (lyrics and music), “Creepy Crawlways”:
      But the scariest of all’s the witless caver;
      Spelunker is the name that he goes by.
      He caves alone with just one light,
      A worn-out rope, and boots too tight,
      Looking for a cave in which to die.
    • 2011, Michael Gordon, Caving in Ontario: Exploring Buried Karst:
      it is a truth that every caver was once a spelunker with a flashlight and a tangled ball of string.
    • 2018, Douglas Reichert Powell, Endless Caverns: An Underground Journey into the Show Caves of Appalachia:
      “‘Cavers,’” the editor notes, “generally consider ‘spelunkers’ to be people who have no real knowledge or understanding of caves and caving safety, but who decide to enter a cave anyway, usually without proper equipment.”

Derived terms

Translations

References

  1. Johnson, Karl and Sarah (February 2, 2018), “Son of 'caveman,' Springfield bookstore president Charlie Johnson marks 90th birthday”, in MassLive, retrieved 2019-03-12
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.