Dustman

/ˈdʌstmən/ noun

Definition

A man whose job is to collect trash, garbage, and refuse from homes and streets, especially in British English.

Etymology

Compound of 'dust' (used colloquially for garbage in British English since the 1800s) and 'man'. The term is distinctly British, being largely replaced in American English by 'garbage collector' or 'sanitation worker'.

Kelly Says

The 'Dustman' became a cultural icon in British life and even inspired the Beatles song 'Lady Madonna' with the lyric 'see the dustman on the corner'—generations of British children grew up hearing the dustman's arrival as a regular morning sound!

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Occupational term defaulting to masculine form. Historical usage assumed male workers in sanitation/cleaning roles, with 'dustman' becoming the standard despite women working these jobs.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'sanitation worker', 'waste collector', or 'dust collector' for gender neutrality. If referring to a specific person, use their actual role title or pronouns.

Inclusive Alternatives

["sanitation worker","waste collector","dust collector","cleaner"]

Empowerment Note

Women performed sanitation and domestic cleaning work extensively but were often invisible in occupational naming conventions; recognizing this erasure is part of equitable language.

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