skid row

Etymology


An alteration of. In 1852, skid road was first applied to a slum area at the loggers’ part of town in Seattle, Washington, USA, and before 1900 it had come into common usage in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Over time, the variant skid row came to refer to a district or slum frequented by alcoholics and hobos, even in areas without a lumber industry.

Noun

 * 1)  An especially dilapidated section of a city, characterized by abandoned or run-down buildings and vices such as drug dealing and prostitution, and frequented by homeless people.
 * 2)  A situation of great desperation or misfortune.
 * 1)  A situation of great desperation or misfortune.

Translations

 * Estonian: kriminaalne linnajagu, slumm
 * Finnish: slummikortteli
 * French: ,
 * German:, heruntergekommenes Viertel
 * Spanish: barrios bajos