Appendix:Snowclones/I'm an X, not a Y

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Star Trek, 1966-1969 and later, where the character Dr. McCoy tells Captain Kirk, "I'm a doctor, not a(n) [mechanic, engineer, etc.]" The first usage of the exact formula (similar ideas differently worded had previously appeared) was in the 1967 episode "The Devil in the Dark": "I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer." It was used again in four subsequent episodes of Star Trek (with other Ys), and further in the spinoff TV series and movies.

Phrase[edit]

I'm a(n) X, not a(n) Y!

  1. (snowclone) An indignant or incredulous reply to a request etc., implying that what is being expected, suitable for Y, is absurd to ask of the speaker, who is an X. X and Y are usually professions or beliefs, and significantly different from one another.

Statistics[edit]

From the first two pages of Google results: "I'm an entertainer, not a fighter", "I'm an alcoholic, not a Barbie doll", "I'm an environmentalist, not a hippie", "I'm an anarchist not a capitalist", "I'm an anarchist not a Republican", "I'm an airplane mechanic, not a miracle worker", and "I'm an optimist, not a sap".

External links[edit]