Dopper, noun1 and & adjective
/ˈdɔpə(r)/
- Forms:
- Also Dorper, and with small initial.
- Origin:
- Etymology obscure:
- Note:
- ‘The late Paul Kruger — a great pillar of that church — used to say that the word came from the Dutch “Domper”, meaning extinguisher, because the Reformed Church objected to the “new lights” introduced by other churches into their worship,..for which reason the name “domper” (degenerated into “dopper”) was given to the church. Another good authority stated that the word “dopper” is derived from “dorper”, meaning villager, a term used to distinguish the countryman from the townsman; while the oldest derivation is from “dop”, a shell, from the way in which the old people used to cut their hair so as to resemble an inverted calabash shell on their heads.’ (L.H. Brinkman The Glory of the Back Veld, 1924, p.58.) See also quotation 1990.
A. noun
a. A nickname for a member of the strictly calvinist Gereformeerde Kerk in Suid-Afrika (see Gereformeerde); sometimes derogatory.
1850 N.J. Merriman Cape Jrnls (1957) 142These Doppers are a sort of Dutch Church Puritans, their principal characteristics being a Quakerish costume in dress, a disinclination to sing hymns in the church, [etc.].
1991 A. Van Wyk Birth of New Afrikaner 109They are known as Doppers and, although orthodox in Calvinist/Protestant doctrine, they have for years been more enlightened in their political way of thinking than their DRC brethren...I respect FW as a good Dopper.
b. combinations
Dopper Church, ||Dopper Kerk [Afrikaans, kerk church], the Gereformeerde Kerk in Suid-Afrika (see Gereformeerde), one of the family of Afrikaans Calvinist churches; the church building used by members of this church .
- Note:
- See note at Dutch Reformed.
1975 E. Prov. Herald 27 May 37Two churches, the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk and the Gereformeerde (Dopper) Kerk, were the foundations on which the town grew.
B. adjective
a. Of or pertaining to the Doppers, or descriptive of their former conservative, old-fashioned dress and hairstyle.
1881 P. Gillmore Land of Boer 111A stalwart Boer from the Transvaal, and dressed in the Dopper costume.
1989 Reader’s Digest Illust. Hist. of S. Afr. 114The trekkers, dressed in traditional dopper coats (short coats buttoned from top to bottom), kappies (bonnets) and hand-made riempieskoene (leather thong shoes).
A nickname for a member of the strictly calvinist Gereformeerde Kerk in Suid-Afrika (see Gereformeerde); sometimes derogatory.
, the Gereformeerde Kerk in Suid-Afrika (see Gereformeerde), one of the family of Afrikaans Calvinist churches; the church building used by members of this church
Of or pertaining to the Doppers, or descriptive of their former conservative, old-fashioned dress and hairstyle.
Of or pertaining to unsophisticated, rural people.
- Derivatives:
- Hence (nonce) Dopperdom noun, the ‘Doppers’ collectively; doppered adjective jocular, dominated by ‘Doppers’; doppery adjective, see quotation 1901.1888 Cape Punch 28 Mar. 184Australia:..Perhaps old mama Britannia adopted you. Cape: Yes, I’m an adopted son, although mamma sometimes says I’m a doppered son.1901 W.S. Sutherland S. Afr. Sketches 86The calibre of people comes out in a camp as it does in a big city...‘East-end’ hails from Zastron, and is somewhat ‘doppery’.

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