lockdowner

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From lockdown +‎ -er.

Noun[edit]

lockdowner (plural lockdowners)

  1. A person who supports lockdown measures (especially during the COVID-19 pandemic).
    Antonym: anti-lockdowner
    • 2023 January 4, David Wallace-Wells, “9 Pandemic Narratives We’re Getting Wrong”, in The New York Times[1]:
      If we’re hoping to adjudicate what seems like a forever war between lockdowners and let-it-rippers, it probably helps to recall what first-year pandemic policy looked like — and how much of what we might remember as policy was really just pandemic.
  2. A person whose movements and activities are limited by a lockdown (especially during the COVID-19 pandemic).
    • 2021 September 13, Andrew Williams, “Don’t redesign the Apple Watch, fix all this instead”, in Wired UK[2]:
      Why Apple fell in love with its own creation here is understandable. You can zoom about this map of apps like a holiday-starved lockdowner browsing Google Maps, and it lets you zoom right into apps with a final twist of the crown.