LexBrew
Vol. 09 · Loanwords ·Yiddish ·1910s

Schlock

from shlak

Meaning
Shoddy or cheap merchandise; trashy cultural product.
Source word
shlak
Route into English
Yiddish *shlak* (a stroke, something damaged, from German *Schlag*) → American English garment-trade slang. Originally meant damaged goods sold at discount; generalised to anything cheap and trashy.
Arrived
1910s

From Yiddish

Mass migration from Ashkenazi Eastern Europe to New York (1880–1920) funnelled Yiddish into American English, from where it diffused globally.

English borrows.

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