paper driver

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Japanese ペーパードライバー (pēpā doraibā), from English paper + driver.

Noun[edit]

paper driver (plural paper drivers)

  1. (rare, usually non-native speakers' English) A person who has a driver's license but never drives.
    • 1997 September 17, Mitch Sako, “NY TIMES: Japan's Economy Shrinks by 11.2% Annual Rate”, in soc.culture.japan.moderated[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-23:
      But the average Japanese does not own a car (as an individual). I don't have the figures but someone told me that less than half of those of driving age do not own a car, moreso,[sic] of those who do have a license, a relatively small percentage of those with licenses own their own car, many are paper drivers.
    • 2002 February 17, Eric Takabayashi, “I'm going to New Jersey via Wisconsin to pick up some Snickers and Mars”, in fj.life.in-japan[2] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-23:
      There are people who surely should not drive. "Paper drivers" and at risk drivers should be recertified.
    • 2005 March 23, harv, “Interesting road rule in Japan.”, in aus.cars[3] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-05-23:
      There are courses aimed at "Paper Drivers" people who get their license but never use it, I know people that have had their license for over 7 Years and never driven except for the tests
    • 2009, Kumiko Murata, Jennifer Jenkins, Global Englishes in Asian Contexts: Current and Future Debates[4], page 22:
      If a person in Japan identifies her/himself as a paper driver, no non-Japanese is likely to find the intelligibility of the term difficult at all, but probably most non-Japanese will have no idea of the comprehensibility or the interpretability of the term. Almost all non-Japanese need to be taught that a paper driver is one who holds a legal driver's license but does not consider her/himself competent as a driver and usually uses the license only as a means of identification when legally necessary.

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